1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:02,920 Speaker 1: Here we go, kicking off another busy broadcast week on 2 00:00:03,040 --> 00:00:07,800 Speaker 1: the Dan o'donald Show. Welcome to it. A brand new 3 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:12,240 Speaker 1: poll gives some clarity as to where things stand just 4 00:00:12,400 --> 00:00:15,240 Speaker 1: a little more than a year away from the twenty 5 00:00:15,320 --> 00:00:21,960 Speaker 1: twenty six Wisconsin governor's race, plus a new exclusive about 6 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,120 Speaker 1: a Democrat who is almost certain now to jump in 7 00:00:27,760 --> 00:00:31,280 Speaker 1: that race. Hope you all at a great weekend and 8 00:00:31,600 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 1: enjoyed the packers by got out and enjoyed the last 9 00:00:36,120 --> 00:00:40,879 Speaker 1: summer like weather of I fear the entire year. We 10 00:00:40,960 --> 00:00:43,720 Speaker 1: probably won't get a weekend like that until next I 11 00:00:43,720 --> 00:00:47,360 Speaker 1: don't know, June July. It was a gorgeous one. But 12 00:00:47,440 --> 00:00:50,480 Speaker 1: we are back to business with three hours of broadcast 13 00:00:50,520 --> 00:00:52,320 Speaker 1: excellence on the way, or at the very least and 14 00:00:52,360 --> 00:00:55,080 Speaker 1: far more likely broadcast competence. You want to join us, 15 00:00:55,120 --> 00:00:58,320 Speaker 1: the aditnows dot com talk and text line is always 16 00:00:58,360 --> 00:01:02,720 Speaker 1: open four one four seven nine nine eleven thirty reaches 17 00:01:02,760 --> 00:01:05,200 Speaker 1: toll free on eight hundred eight three eight nine four 18 00:01:05,400 --> 00:01:09,720 Speaker 1: seven six. Email medd at iHeartMedia dot com. Follow me 19 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:12,640 Speaker 1: on social media at dan O'donnalds Show, on X on 20 00:01:12,680 --> 00:01:17,080 Speaker 1: Facebook and on Instagram. Just a quick program note there 21 00:01:17,120 --> 00:01:19,560 Speaker 1: will be no live stream today as we are doing 22 00:01:19,600 --> 00:01:21,640 Speaker 1: a little bit of maintenance and we have to do 23 00:01:21,720 --> 00:01:27,920 Speaker 1: necessary system updates on the danocam, and producer Jeff said, 24 00:01:28,080 --> 00:01:30,600 Speaker 1: you should probably make up something like you've got a 25 00:01:30,680 --> 00:01:33,600 Speaker 1: giant ZiT on your nose and that's the reason you 26 00:01:33,640 --> 00:01:35,920 Speaker 1: don't want to be on camera. No, we do have 27 00:01:35,959 --> 00:01:39,560 Speaker 1: to do a quick little bit of maintenance. Have no fear. However, 28 00:01:40,160 --> 00:01:43,640 Speaker 1: tomorrow we will be back up live and streaming. So 29 00:01:43,760 --> 00:01:48,440 Speaker 1: it's old school just audio today. But to make it 30 00:01:48,520 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: up to you, I very humbly present a chance to 31 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:57,200 Speaker 1: win one thousand dollars unless you see Dan, lest you 32 00:01:57,280 --> 00:02:00,240 Speaker 1: say Dan, that's that's really not everybody has a chainants 33 00:02:00,280 --> 00:02:06,000 Speaker 1: to win, Dear listener. On Friday Show, we had not one, 34 00:02:06,720 --> 00:02:12,760 Speaker 1: but two nationwide winners. James from Milwaukee was listening to 35 00:02:12,840 --> 00:02:16,320 Speaker 1: us right away. In the three o'clock hour, he entered 36 00:02:16,360 --> 00:02:19,280 Speaker 1: the keyword. His entry was picked at random. He won 37 00:02:19,320 --> 00:02:24,000 Speaker 1: a thousand bucks. Then two hours later, Nathan from Germantown 38 00:02:24,360 --> 00:02:28,320 Speaker 1: was listening in the five o'clock hour. His entry was 39 00:02:28,560 --> 00:02:32,440 Speaker 1: also selected as the winner. Both one one thousand dollars 40 00:02:32,560 --> 00:02:36,960 Speaker 1: and let's make it another double. Your keyword in the 41 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:42,520 Speaker 1: Fall Fortune Cash contest this hour, Money Money, Money. You 42 00:02:42,560 --> 00:02:45,760 Speaker 1: have got until five to the top of the hour, 43 00:02:45,919 --> 00:02:48,640 Speaker 1: so about forty five minutes to go to our website 44 00:02:48,960 --> 00:02:53,160 Speaker 1: and enter the keyword money to enter the contest for 45 00:02:53,200 --> 00:02:56,720 Speaker 1: this hour. Coming up in the five o'clock hour, we 46 00:02:56,760 --> 00:02:59,400 Speaker 1: are going to be joined by former Governor and current 47 00:02:59,440 --> 00:03:04,560 Speaker 1: President Young America's Foundation, Scott Walker for a breakdown of 48 00:03:04,560 --> 00:03:08,520 Speaker 1: where he thinks things stand, not just in the governor's race, 49 00:03:08,560 --> 00:03:12,560 Speaker 1: but also in the state Supreme Court race as well. 50 00:03:12,600 --> 00:03:15,079 Speaker 1: He and I had a great event with the Wisconsin 51 00:03:15,160 --> 00:03:19,320 Speaker 1: Forum at the Ingleside Hotel on Thursday evening, a great 52 00:03:19,400 --> 00:03:21,800 Speaker 1: chat about just that, and I said, you know what, Governor, 53 00:03:22,000 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 1: we would love to have you on the show to 54 00:03:24,160 --> 00:03:27,920 Speaker 1: share your insights and we get to talk about this 55 00:03:28,200 --> 00:03:33,560 Speaker 1: new poll that just came out yesterday Badger battle Ground 56 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:41,760 Speaker 1: Pole shows great news for Republican Congressman Tom Tiffany. Tiffany 57 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:47,760 Speaker 1: is overwhelmingly running away with the Republican race. Now, it 58 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:52,600 Speaker 1: should be noted that this was just five hundred registered 59 00:03:52,680 --> 00:03:56,600 Speaker 1: voters and the poll was in the field pretty much 60 00:03:56,640 --> 00:03:59,880 Speaker 1: at the exact time that Tiffany was making his announcement 61 00:04:00,160 --> 00:04:02,880 Speaker 1: on this show and then doing a big media blitz, 62 00:04:03,400 --> 00:04:08,240 Speaker 1: so he had tremendous name recognition, and polls right now 63 00:04:08,720 --> 00:04:12,400 Speaker 1: are all about name recognition, as I will explain in 64 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:15,160 Speaker 1: just a second, but he had the support of thirty 65 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:22,200 Speaker 1: percent of respondents. Second place was not, in fact Josh Showman, 66 00:04:22,640 --> 00:04:27,120 Speaker 1: who is the Washington County executive. It was Eric Hovedy 67 00:04:27,520 --> 00:04:31,359 Speaker 1: at fourteen percent. Hovedy is not running for governor. He 68 00:04:31,440 --> 00:04:35,560 Speaker 1: is probably never going to announce a run for governor. 69 00:04:35,600 --> 00:04:38,359 Speaker 1: He ran for Senate in the last cycle back in 70 00:04:38,440 --> 00:04:44,479 Speaker 1: twenty twenty four and heartbreakingly lost to incumbent Lib Tammy Baldwin. 71 00:04:46,360 --> 00:04:52,119 Speaker 1: He is followed by Tim Michaels just more than nine 72 00:04:52,200 --> 00:04:56,679 Speaker 1: percent of voters favored quote none of these candidates. Also 73 00:04:57,000 --> 00:05:03,440 Speaker 1: Showman and Mary fels Kowski. Those were the other candidates 74 00:05:03,440 --> 00:05:08,040 Speaker 1: who were in the race over on the Democratic side. 75 00:05:09,120 --> 00:05:12,600 Speaker 1: Something of a surprise, but this fits in with the 76 00:05:12,839 --> 00:05:16,120 Speaker 1: exclusive I Am going to break in just a second, 77 00:05:17,279 --> 00:05:23,400 Speaker 1: garnering sixteen percent in the battle Badger battle Ground poll 78 00:05:24,480 --> 00:05:30,799 Speaker 1: is our old friend man deadbeat Barnes sixteen percent say 79 00:05:31,080 --> 00:05:36,000 Speaker 1: they would favor him. Lieutenant Governor Sarah Rodriguez in second 80 00:05:36,200 --> 00:05:41,080 Speaker 1: at eight percent, followed by Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley 81 00:05:41,600 --> 00:05:46,800 Speaker 1: at seven percent. State Representative Francesca Hong and kelled Royce 82 00:05:47,160 --> 00:05:52,720 Speaker 1: also tied at four percent. The former CEO of the WEDC, 83 00:05:53,200 --> 00:05:56,400 Speaker 1: Missy Hughes, is at two percent. Josh Cole is in 84 00:05:56,440 --> 00:06:00,359 Speaker 1: there as well. Former Democratic Party of Wisconsin chairman Ben 85 00:06:00,520 --> 00:06:07,640 Speaker 1: Wickler in at one percent as well. What this means 86 00:06:08,160 --> 00:06:13,680 Speaker 1: is that nobody is really decided. In fact, undecided is 87 00:06:13,960 --> 00:06:18,080 Speaker 1: technically the leader on both sides. Thirty four percent of 88 00:06:18,200 --> 00:06:22,920 Speaker 1: Republicans in this poll say they're still undecided. Thirty eight 89 00:06:23,040 --> 00:06:27,040 Speaker 1: percent of Democrats say they're still undecided. More than twice 90 00:06:27,080 --> 00:06:30,320 Speaker 1: as many people who support Man deadbeat Barnes say they 91 00:06:30,400 --> 00:06:32,919 Speaker 1: just don't know who they want as a candidate. It 92 00:06:33,160 --> 00:06:37,840 Speaker 1: is notable, though, that a named candidate like Tiffany is 93 00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:43,560 Speaker 1: in this race. It is not good news for Josh Showman, 94 00:06:43,680 --> 00:06:48,479 Speaker 1: who has been campaigning for five months now that he 95 00:06:48,560 --> 00:06:53,400 Speaker 1: has got just four percent. Tim Michaels and Eric Hovedy 96 00:06:54,080 --> 00:06:58,080 Speaker 1: are both more than doubling his support. Michaels is not 97 00:06:58,160 --> 00:07:01,400 Speaker 1: in this race. He I think, I think is not 98 00:07:01,560 --> 00:07:04,400 Speaker 1: going to launch a race. I have heard some rumblings 99 00:07:04,400 --> 00:07:10,080 Speaker 1: that he would be potentially thinking about running. This should 100 00:07:10,160 --> 00:07:13,880 Speaker 1: probably dissuade him if he's only getting nine percent in 101 00:07:13,960 --> 00:07:17,720 Speaker 1: a poll. That's all about name identification. It is all 102 00:07:17,760 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 1: about who actually knows who you are. Nobody outside of 103 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:27,040 Speaker 1: a very tiny bubble, for example, actually knows the name 104 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:31,640 Speaker 1: Missy Hughes. It's almost miraculous that she got two percent 105 00:07:31,680 --> 00:07:34,880 Speaker 1: of the vote that might be entirely from the Hughes family. 106 00:07:36,000 --> 00:07:40,280 Speaker 1: Tom Tiffany has significant name ID because he is a 107 00:07:40,360 --> 00:07:45,760 Speaker 1: congressman and because his name has come up several times 108 00:07:45,800 --> 00:07:52,560 Speaker 1: before as a possible gubernatorial candidate. Showman whose biggest problem 109 00:07:52,680 --> 00:07:56,000 Speaker 1: by far is the fact that even though he's been 110 00:07:56,080 --> 00:07:59,640 Speaker 1: running so long, he's only garnering four percent in a 111 00:07:59,720 --> 00:08:04,520 Speaker 1: name ID poll. He just hasn't been able to gain traction. 112 00:08:04,800 --> 00:08:09,800 Speaker 1: His strategy has been since he doesn't have huge backers 113 00:08:09,880 --> 00:08:14,200 Speaker 1: and big campaign coffers, he's not rolling in dough like 114 00:08:14,640 --> 00:08:18,520 Speaker 1: former candidate Bill Berrion was, because he was self funding, 115 00:08:18,800 --> 00:08:21,040 Speaker 1: so he was able to get his message up on 116 00:08:21,280 --> 00:08:24,960 Speaker 1: WISN radio. I believe he was on TV. He was 117 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:29,240 Speaker 1: buying digital and he spent something like a million dollars 118 00:08:29,400 --> 00:08:32,520 Speaker 1: or was on pace to spend a million dollars in 119 00:08:32,720 --> 00:08:38,640 Speaker 1: a campaign that crashed and burned. The less said about 120 00:08:38,800 --> 00:08:48,200 Speaker 1: specifically why probably the better. But Showman hasn't been able 121 00:08:48,240 --> 00:08:50,160 Speaker 1: to get up on digital. He hasn't been able to 122 00:08:50,160 --> 00:08:53,360 Speaker 1: get up on radio or on TV. He's been trying 123 00:08:53,400 --> 00:08:57,280 Speaker 1: to get what's known as earned media appearances on shows 124 00:08:57,400 --> 00:09:01,040 Speaker 1: like this, Maky McKenna, Jay Weber, benyout things like that. 125 00:09:01,320 --> 00:09:06,320 Speaker 1: And he is a fantastic guy and a fantastic candidate, 126 00:09:07,559 --> 00:09:12,120 Speaker 1: it just doesn't seem like he's got the ability to 127 00:09:12,360 --> 00:09:19,560 Speaker 1: overcome a massive gap. As name recognition becomes a bigger, 128 00:09:19,600 --> 00:09:23,839 Speaker 1: bigger thing, and as as that giant group of undecided 129 00:09:23,920 --> 00:09:26,600 Speaker 1: voters shrinks, and it is going to shrink, and it 130 00:09:26,640 --> 00:09:30,480 Speaker 1: is going to shrink relatively quickly, a whole lot more 131 00:09:30,720 --> 00:09:34,120 Speaker 1: of that voter base is probably going to go to 132 00:09:34,120 --> 00:09:39,520 Speaker 1: Tom Tiffany. Now, you might be able to make the 133 00:09:39,760 --> 00:09:43,760 Speaker 1: claim that this I'm not going to call I don't 134 00:09:43,800 --> 00:09:51,480 Speaker 1: know exactly who is backing the Badger Battleground poll. It's 135 00:09:51,520 --> 00:09:56,600 Speaker 1: from Platform Communications, and I don't know exactly the polster, 136 00:09:56,760 --> 00:09:58,960 Speaker 1: nor do I know, And I'm not going to impugne 137 00:09:59,000 --> 00:10:01,760 Speaker 1: everybody anybody, but saying that this is a push poll, 138 00:10:02,440 --> 00:10:05,680 Speaker 1: what a push pull is is a poll conducted not 139 00:10:05,840 --> 00:10:08,040 Speaker 1: for the purposes of seeing what the state of a 140 00:10:08,160 --> 00:10:13,920 Speaker 1: race is, but for the purposes of influencing opinion. If 141 00:10:13,920 --> 00:10:17,440 Speaker 1: you wanted to influence opinion with a poll like this, 142 00:10:18,000 --> 00:10:22,440 Speaker 1: you would say, look, thirty percent of the voters already 143 00:10:22,440 --> 00:10:25,480 Speaker 1: support Tom Tiffany. He just got in the race two 144 00:10:25,559 --> 00:10:29,439 Speaker 1: weeks ago. Showman has been in for four or five months. 145 00:10:29,720 --> 00:10:33,200 Speaker 1: He's only getting four percent. Fewer people know who he 146 00:10:33,520 --> 00:10:37,080 Speaker 1: is than two people who aren't even running in Hovedy 147 00:10:37,160 --> 00:10:40,559 Speaker 1: and Michaels, And in fact, when you combine there to vote, 148 00:10:40,559 --> 00:10:45,720 Speaker 1: totally get five times more support than Showman does. So 149 00:10:45,920 --> 00:10:49,560 Speaker 1: if you're Tom Tiffany, you're saying, hey, look, I'm not 150 00:10:49,760 --> 00:10:54,000 Speaker 1: saying I should be coronated more than a year before 151 00:10:54,720 --> 00:10:59,760 Speaker 1: the gubernatorial election, but it's going to be pretty difficult 152 00:10:59,800 --> 00:11:03,400 Speaker 1: for anyone else to get in. This would also be 153 00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:07,120 Speaker 1: a poll that if Michaels was thinking about getting in, 154 00:11:08,320 --> 00:11:11,080 Speaker 1: probably no amount of money that you're going to be 155 00:11:11,160 --> 00:11:15,320 Speaker 1: able to throw at this through self funding is going 156 00:11:15,360 --> 00:11:17,960 Speaker 1: to be able to make up a twenty one point 157 00:11:18,360 --> 00:11:21,200 Speaker 1: gap when so many voters are already saying, okay, I 158 00:11:21,240 --> 00:11:24,200 Speaker 1: like Tom Tiffany. I think Tom Tiffany is our guy. 159 00:11:25,240 --> 00:11:29,080 Speaker 1: What is the other thing that Showman and Michaels have 160 00:11:29,200 --> 00:11:36,640 Speaker 1: in common Southeast Wisconsin? Michael's Corporation right downtown Milwaukee. Josh Chawman, 161 00:11:36,760 --> 00:11:40,640 Speaker 1: County executive of one of the Wow counties. That old 162 00:11:40,760 --> 00:11:44,160 Speaker 1: calculation that you run up the vote in the Wow 163 00:11:44,240 --> 00:11:48,199 Speaker 1: counties to win statewide as a Republican I don't think 164 00:11:48,280 --> 00:11:52,400 Speaker 1: holds anymore because of what I've termed liberal creep, where 165 00:11:52,400 --> 00:11:55,880 Speaker 1: you get more Democrats moving out of the left wing 166 00:11:56,000 --> 00:12:00,600 Speaker 1: bastions of Milwaukee and Wahwatosa, and they're getting farther and 167 00:12:00,720 --> 00:12:05,520 Speaker 1: farther north up into Washington County, West into Waukeshaw County. 168 00:12:05,679 --> 00:12:09,440 Speaker 1: Look at what's going on in Elngrove and Brookfield right now. 169 00:12:09,600 --> 00:12:13,960 Speaker 1: Those cities are getting bluer as you're getting liberal creep. 170 00:12:14,240 --> 00:12:16,920 Speaker 1: What sort of happens? And yes, I know I am 171 00:12:17,040 --> 00:12:22,240 Speaker 1: using this analogy advisedly, I know exactly what I'm saying. 172 00:12:22,240 --> 00:12:25,079 Speaker 1: They're sort of like locusts. Okay, I don't mean they're 173 00:12:25,160 --> 00:12:29,000 Speaker 1: like insects, but I mean, what do locusts do. They 174 00:12:29,080 --> 00:12:32,240 Speaker 1: go to a place, they destroy the crops, and then 175 00:12:32,320 --> 00:12:35,520 Speaker 1: they move on to the next farmland. Right, it's the 176 00:12:35,640 --> 00:12:39,480 Speaker 1: exact same thing with deps. They start out in Milwaukee, 177 00:12:40,080 --> 00:12:43,400 Speaker 1: lower priced, or maybe they come from Marquette or UWM 178 00:12:43,480 --> 00:12:48,000 Speaker 1: or what are the university's MSOE or whatever. They start 179 00:12:48,040 --> 00:12:50,839 Speaker 1: in an urban setting, or maybe they move to Milwaukee 180 00:12:50,880 --> 00:12:54,839 Speaker 1: for work. They've got a business downtown. Then they move 181 00:12:54,880 --> 00:12:59,160 Speaker 1: out to a smaller home in wahwa Tosa, maybe West Dallas, 182 00:13:00,400 --> 00:13:03,960 Speaker 1: as they start to realize, hey, these communities are kind 183 00:13:03,960 --> 00:13:06,640 Speaker 1: of screwed up, and we want a bigger home, we 184 00:13:06,679 --> 00:13:11,200 Speaker 1: want a bigger yard, we want better schools. We need 185 00:13:11,200 --> 00:13:13,360 Speaker 1: to go out to a place like Brookfield. Well, they 186 00:13:13,440 --> 00:13:17,720 Speaker 1: take their politics with them and you get a place 187 00:13:17,800 --> 00:13:22,800 Speaker 1: like Brookfield, and by extension, all of Walkershaw County getting 188 00:13:22,880 --> 00:13:25,520 Speaker 1: far more blue than it ever has been. We're seeing 189 00:13:25,520 --> 00:13:30,240 Speaker 1: the exact same thing in not so much Washington County, 190 00:13:30,280 --> 00:13:34,840 Speaker 1: but in suburban areas across the state. So the idea 191 00:13:35,080 --> 00:13:38,600 Speaker 1: that you need somebody and this was a very popular 192 00:13:38,679 --> 00:13:42,680 Speaker 1: idea in the Scott Walker era. Right, what Walker we 193 00:13:42,800 --> 00:13:46,160 Speaker 1: now know is something of a transformative figure. He's a 194 00:13:46,160 --> 00:13:49,120 Speaker 1: conservative who's able to win in Milwaukee County. Is Milwaukee 195 00:13:49,160 --> 00:13:52,640 Speaker 1: County executive coming off of the f Thomas ament scandal. 196 00:13:54,720 --> 00:13:58,320 Speaker 1: We have gone to the well of southeast Wisconsin for 197 00:13:58,520 --> 00:14:03,319 Speaker 1: candidates for a decade and a half now, with practically 198 00:14:03,360 --> 00:14:06,880 Speaker 1: nothing to show for it. In fact, we haven't won 199 00:14:06,920 --> 00:14:13,000 Speaker 1: a gubernatorial race since Walker. Tiffany's argument is I represent 200 00:14:13,040 --> 00:14:17,840 Speaker 1: the north Woods. He is incredibly popular up there. The 201 00:14:17,880 --> 00:14:21,960 Speaker 1: north Woods went from under Dave Obie, a safe Democrat 202 00:14:22,000 --> 00:14:28,040 Speaker 1: seat from the blue collar, white Democrat rural and exurban 203 00:14:28,160 --> 00:14:33,120 Speaker 1: voters to hardcore red with Sean Duffy and Donald Trump 204 00:14:33,240 --> 00:14:38,640 Speaker 1: and now Tom Tiffany, they if they show up for him. Now, 205 00:14:38,680 --> 00:14:42,760 Speaker 1: granted they are fewer in numbers, but the thinking is 206 00:14:42,800 --> 00:14:45,920 Speaker 1: that you need to give them a reason to vote 207 00:14:46,320 --> 00:14:49,520 Speaker 1: for you. We are in dire straits with what I 208 00:14:49,560 --> 00:14:53,360 Speaker 1: have dubbed the only Trump voters in those rural areas 209 00:14:53,600 --> 00:14:58,080 Speaker 1: who just are not showing up for candidates not named 210 00:14:58,320 --> 00:15:01,880 Speaker 1: Donald Trump. If you want to get those voters to 211 00:15:02,080 --> 00:15:06,360 Speaker 1: show up, give them a candidate who they know, whose 212 00:15:06,520 --> 00:15:09,520 Speaker 1: values aligned with them. Because the rest of the state 213 00:15:10,160 --> 00:15:12,880 Speaker 1: looks at the Milwaukee area with a great deal of 214 00:15:13,000 --> 00:15:17,560 Speaker 1: suspicion and a great deal of frankly disdain and resentment. 215 00:15:18,040 --> 00:15:25,080 Speaker 1: Same thing with Madison. I'm not saying Tiffany is a 216 00:15:25,240 --> 00:15:28,560 Speaker 1: shoe in, and I'm not saying that Josh Showman should 217 00:15:28,680 --> 00:15:31,160 Speaker 1: drop out based on one poll, although there was a 218 00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:34,080 Speaker 1: poll in the summer that showed largely the same thing 219 00:15:34,560 --> 00:15:37,080 Speaker 1: that Tiffany has a lot of built in support, and 220 00:15:37,160 --> 00:15:41,560 Speaker 1: I still do believe that in a midterm election where 221 00:15:41,800 --> 00:15:45,440 Speaker 1: the Democrats are probably going to be the favorite because 222 00:15:45,520 --> 00:15:49,680 Speaker 1: Republicans control the White House, and that is a historical trend. 223 00:15:50,320 --> 00:15:54,520 Speaker 1: The only time that a candidate has won when his 224 00:15:54,760 --> 00:15:59,000 Speaker 1: party controlled the White House is twenty twenty two Tony Evers, 225 00:15:59,080 --> 00:16:02,440 Speaker 1: believe it or not, in what was supposed to be 226 00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:08,160 Speaker 1: a big red wave year that wasn't. Democrats in Wisconsin 227 00:16:08,240 --> 00:16:11,400 Speaker 1: have got to be considered the favorites based on that 228 00:16:11,680 --> 00:16:16,800 Speaker 1: history and based on how midterm elections usually go. Okay, 229 00:16:17,920 --> 00:16:26,080 Speaker 1: that's number one. In twenty eighteen, a candidate with a 230 00:16:26,280 --> 00:16:31,800 Speaker 1: very similar profile to Showman won statewide in Florida, Ron 231 00:16:31,840 --> 00:16:36,560 Speaker 1: de Santis. Florida was a fifty to fifty state back 232 00:16:36,600 --> 00:16:44,000 Speaker 1: then and DeSantis a young, energetic guy, military background. Now 233 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:46,880 Speaker 1: he had more name recognition than Showman because he was 234 00:16:46,920 --> 00:16:51,400 Speaker 1: a congressman, but he won, and now Florida is about 235 00:16:51,440 --> 00:16:55,360 Speaker 1: as red as red gets. I am still convinced that 236 00:16:55,440 --> 00:16:59,000 Speaker 1: the type of candidate who wins in what would otherwise 237 00:16:59,080 --> 00:17:01,800 Speaker 1: be expected to be a big Democrat year is a 238 00:17:01,840 --> 00:17:05,200 Speaker 1: candidate like Showman as opposed to a candidate like Tiffany, 239 00:17:05,480 --> 00:17:08,680 Speaker 1: who has a long voting record who's very well known. 240 00:17:09,560 --> 00:17:12,000 Speaker 1: But the numbers don't lie. When we come back here 241 00:17:12,000 --> 00:17:16,280 Speaker 1: on the Dan O'Donnells show an exclusive story tied to 242 00:17:16,440 --> 00:17:22,359 Speaker 1: where Democrats find themselves in this Badger Battleground poll. Stay 243 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,639 Speaker 1: tuned that exclusive coming up in just three minutes. The 244 00:17:25,720 --> 00:17:31,560 Speaker 1: Republican results in the Badger Battleground poll released yesterday morning, 245 00:17:31,960 --> 00:17:36,120 Speaker 1: we're not especially surprising. I think most observers expected that 246 00:17:36,160 --> 00:17:39,720 Speaker 1: Tiffany would have a relatively sizeable win. I think the 247 00:17:39,800 --> 00:17:42,880 Speaker 1: only real surprise came in the fact that his next 248 00:17:42,920 --> 00:17:47,800 Speaker 1: closest competitor was Eric Huvedy, followed by Tim michaels Mary 249 00:17:47,840 --> 00:17:55,680 Speaker 1: Felskowski has one percent. Josh Showman, the only other named 250 00:17:55,880 --> 00:18:01,080 Speaker 1: candidate in the race other than Tiffany, has just four percent. 251 00:18:02,480 --> 00:18:07,959 Speaker 1: That's that's difficult for Showmen, it is, But if that 252 00:18:08,200 --> 00:18:11,160 Speaker 1: was not especially surprised, thirty four percent, by the way, 253 00:18:11,160 --> 00:18:14,919 Speaker 1: are still undecided. You start to get what's known as 254 00:18:15,000 --> 00:18:19,320 Speaker 1: the bandwagon effect. Though, when one candidate, especially in a primary, 255 00:18:19,440 --> 00:18:22,399 Speaker 1: appears to be running away with it, a lot of 256 00:18:22,440 --> 00:18:31,120 Speaker 1: those undecided voters tend to gravitate towards that candidate. In primaries, 257 00:18:31,160 --> 00:18:35,400 Speaker 1: it's especially pronounced. We see the effect in general elections 258 00:18:35,440 --> 00:18:39,040 Speaker 1: as well. But if the Republicans were not particularly surprising, 259 00:18:39,560 --> 00:18:46,600 Speaker 1: the Democrats were probably downright shocking. Thirty eight percent are 260 00:18:46,680 --> 00:18:53,520 Speaker 1: still undecided. But the sitting lieutenant governor, who admittedly most 261 00:18:53,560 --> 00:18:57,560 Speaker 1: people don't know, Quick pop quiz, what's the lieutenant governor's name? 262 00:19:00,160 --> 00:19:00,480 Speaker 2: All right? 263 00:19:00,560 --> 00:19:04,800 Speaker 1: Producer Jeff knows, because well, he's been producing me for 264 00:19:04,880 --> 00:19:09,000 Speaker 1: long enough, and we actually have a history with Lieutenant 265 00:19:09,000 --> 00:19:14,680 Speaker 1: Governor Rodriguez and accidentally proving me right that the governor 266 00:19:14,720 --> 00:19:18,359 Speaker 1: actually moved his retirement announcement back a week because of 267 00:19:18,680 --> 00:19:24,080 Speaker 1: me and my reporting. She's in second place at eight percent, 268 00:19:24,440 --> 00:19:28,399 Speaker 1: followed by David Crowley, who has announced his candidacy at 269 00:19:28,440 --> 00:19:33,760 Speaker 1: seven percent. Josh Cole is also at seven percent, although 270 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:38,719 Speaker 1: he is not yet announced. Francesca Hong and Kelda Royce, 271 00:19:38,920 --> 00:19:43,240 Speaker 1: state assembly woman and senator, respectively, both announced candidates, both 272 00:19:43,280 --> 00:19:48,760 Speaker 1: at four percent. Missy Hughes, the former head of we 273 00:19:49,040 --> 00:19:52,800 Speaker 1: DC at two percent. Ben Wickler, who has not announced, 274 00:19:52,840 --> 00:19:59,560 Speaker 1: former Democratic Party Chairman at one percent, doubling up. His 275 00:19:59,720 --> 00:20:05,840 Speaker 1: next closest rival is the former governor Lieutenant governor I 276 00:20:05,920 --> 00:20:12,040 Speaker 1: should say Mandela Barnes. We call him mandeadbeat because when 277 00:20:12,119 --> 00:20:16,520 Speaker 1: he was first running for lieutenant governor back in twenty eighteen, 278 00:20:16,560 --> 00:20:21,440 Speaker 1: he was initially running for governor, it was discovered that 279 00:20:21,680 --> 00:20:25,760 Speaker 1: not only did he fail to pay speeding tickets and 280 00:20:25,880 --> 00:20:30,640 Speaker 1: parking tickets, he also wasn't paying taxes on the condo 281 00:20:30,800 --> 00:20:37,200 Speaker 1: he owned in Milwaukee. When a reporter confronted him about 282 00:20:37,240 --> 00:20:42,200 Speaker 1: this on Juneteenth, it was one of the funniest soundbites 283 00:20:42,240 --> 00:20:46,240 Speaker 1: we played in quite some time. The reporter, whose name 284 00:20:46,280 --> 00:20:49,200 Speaker 1: I believe was Amy, he said, you're really doing this 285 00:20:49,280 --> 00:20:53,960 Speaker 1: on juneteenth, Amy, Really on June teenth. The check is 286 00:20:54,000 --> 00:20:57,040 Speaker 1: in the mail. The check is in the mail. Amy. 287 00:20:57,640 --> 00:21:00,520 Speaker 1: He was very upset about having to be pulled out 288 00:21:00,520 --> 00:21:03,160 Speaker 1: by this and as a result of him not having 289 00:21:03,160 --> 00:21:05,960 Speaker 1: a valid driver's license because I believe it was suspended 290 00:21:06,000 --> 00:21:08,520 Speaker 1: because of all of those unpaid parking and speeding tickets. 291 00:21:08,840 --> 00:21:13,480 Speaker 1: He actually was having the state patrol chow foreur him 292 00:21:13,640 --> 00:21:19,600 Speaker 1: around back and forth from Madison to his home in Milwaukee, 293 00:21:19,640 --> 00:21:22,840 Speaker 1: like they were his own personal uber service. After he 294 00:21:22,880 --> 00:21:26,640 Speaker 1: got himself elected lieutenant governor, so we said, because he's 295 00:21:26,640 --> 00:21:30,320 Speaker 1: a deadbeat, we're gonna call him man deadbeat. He took 296 00:21:30,359 --> 00:21:32,919 Speaker 1: issue with that in a magazine article, saying it is 297 00:21:33,520 --> 00:21:39,919 Speaker 1: what else racist? He will always be man deadbeat to me, 298 00:21:40,280 --> 00:21:46,879 Speaker 1: I can now report exclusively, citing multiple people close to 299 00:21:47,640 --> 00:21:55,080 Speaker 1: the situation, that men Deadbeat is very very very very 300 00:21:55,640 --> 00:22:01,159 Speaker 1: very strongly leaning towards getting in this rag. Now. Last 301 00:22:01,200 --> 00:22:05,680 Speaker 1: week I reported also exclusively that Josh Cole, the state 302 00:22:05,720 --> 00:22:10,000 Speaker 1: Attorney General, is taking his sweet time in determining whether 303 00:22:10,080 --> 00:22:11,879 Speaker 1: or not he's going to get in the race, because 304 00:22:12,200 --> 00:22:15,240 Speaker 1: he spent all of last week meeting with big money 305 00:22:15,280 --> 00:22:19,840 Speaker 1: Democrat donors, and he's been taking meetings pretty consistently to 306 00:22:19,960 --> 00:22:23,920 Speaker 1: try to line up fundraising pledges to try to get 307 00:22:24,040 --> 00:22:26,919 Speaker 1: money behind him when he jumps into this race. It 308 00:22:27,000 --> 00:22:31,840 Speaker 1: is my understanding that that's why the Lieutenant Governors Association 309 00:22:32,160 --> 00:22:36,879 Speaker 1: last week pledged two million dollars to Sarah Rodriguez, because 310 00:22:36,920 --> 00:22:40,040 Speaker 1: the thinking is that Cole is going to get in 311 00:22:40,080 --> 00:22:42,479 Speaker 1: this race with a significant amount of money. He's going 312 00:22:42,520 --> 00:22:45,199 Speaker 1: to be able to hit the airwaves very early, and 313 00:22:45,320 --> 00:22:48,080 Speaker 1: he's going to try to soak up all of the 314 00:22:48,200 --> 00:22:52,560 Speaker 1: endorsements and support from Team Evers as well as Institutional 315 00:22:52,600 --> 00:22:56,640 Speaker 1: Republicans to try to drive some of these other fringier 316 00:22:56,840 --> 00:23:01,760 Speaker 1: candidates like Francesca Hong and Miss Hughes out of the race. 317 00:23:01,880 --> 00:23:06,800 Speaker 1: Also Brett Halsey, former assemblyman slash crazy person. He also 318 00:23:06,840 --> 00:23:09,160 Speaker 1: announced last week that he's going to jump in the race. 319 00:23:09,240 --> 00:23:15,080 Speaker 1: He not surprisingly didn't show up in this poll. I 320 00:23:15,240 --> 00:23:19,240 Speaker 1: said that if Cole does not get in the race 321 00:23:19,320 --> 00:23:23,480 Speaker 1: for governor, he is almost certainly going to run again 322 00:23:23,640 --> 00:23:28,360 Speaker 1: for Attorney General, and he is just going to sit 323 00:23:28,520 --> 00:23:33,159 Speaker 1: on his already sizeable war chest and run for a 324 00:23:33,200 --> 00:23:36,880 Speaker 1: third term as AG. If he were to do that, 325 00:23:37,920 --> 00:23:41,320 Speaker 1: the thinking was is that Mandela would get in the 326 00:23:41,359 --> 00:23:45,440 Speaker 1: governor's race because he is still tight with a lot 327 00:23:45,480 --> 00:23:51,240 Speaker 1: of the people from Team Evers who absolutely despise Sarah Rodriguez, 328 00:23:51,600 --> 00:23:57,320 Speaker 1: the Lieutenant governor. Big reason for that is because she 329 00:23:57,920 --> 00:24:03,080 Speaker 1: accidentally me correct that Governor Evers really did move his 330 00:24:03,160 --> 00:24:07,520 Speaker 1: retirement announcement back a week because I reported that he 331 00:24:07,760 --> 00:24:11,760 Speaker 1: was almost certain to within twenty four to thirty six hours, 332 00:24:11,800 --> 00:24:15,240 Speaker 1: I reported this on June sixteenth, and I said the 333 00:24:15,280 --> 00:24:17,720 Speaker 1: announcement was almost certainly going to come the following day, 334 00:24:17,720 --> 00:24:20,159 Speaker 1: on the seventeenth. Well, that just happened to be the 335 00:24:20,280 --> 00:24:27,200 Speaker 1: day that Sarah Rodriguez created and posted her announcement video 336 00:24:27,760 --> 00:24:33,000 Speaker 1: that she was entering the campaign. Well, Evers team didn't 337 00:24:33,119 --> 00:24:35,840 Speaker 1: like that I was going to be right in my reporting, 338 00:24:35,920 --> 00:24:40,280 Speaker 1: so they pushed everything back a week. Well, Sarah Rodriguez 339 00:24:40,680 --> 00:24:44,880 Speaker 1: made her YouTube video public, but it still had a 340 00:24:45,200 --> 00:24:49,920 Speaker 1: created on date of July seventeenth, even though she announced 341 00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:53,639 Speaker 1: on July twenty fifth. Thereby prove it clearly she was 342 00:24:53,680 --> 00:24:56,719 Speaker 1: given a heads up Evers is going to step aside, 343 00:24:56,760 --> 00:24:59,280 Speaker 1: he's not going to run for a third term. She 344 00:24:59,400 --> 00:25:02,520 Speaker 1: put the video up with the intent of releasing it 345 00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:07,000 Speaker 1: on July eighteenth, the day after Evers was originally going 346 00:25:07,080 --> 00:25:09,480 Speaker 1: to announce his retirement. So they do not like her. 347 00:25:09,480 --> 00:25:13,200 Speaker 1: In fact, Evers was actually asked shortly after this controversy 348 00:25:13,560 --> 00:25:16,119 Speaker 1: whether he would endorse anyone. He said, no, I'm not 349 00:25:16,280 --> 00:25:18,720 Speaker 1: going to, but if there's someone I like who needs 350 00:25:18,720 --> 00:25:20,679 Speaker 1: my support and I think has a chance of winning, 351 00:25:20,960 --> 00:25:23,080 Speaker 1: then I might give an endorsement. That was a huge 352 00:25:23,400 --> 00:25:27,080 Speaker 1: slap in the face to his lieutenant governor. Well, what 353 00:25:27,160 --> 00:25:30,479 Speaker 1: I can tell you now is that his former lieutenant governor, 354 00:25:30,520 --> 00:25:33,840 Speaker 1: who is still in good graces with the powers that 355 00:25:33,880 --> 00:25:37,960 Speaker 1: be in the governor's mansion, Mandela Barnes, is not going 356 00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:40,840 Speaker 1: to wait for call to get in. In fact, you 357 00:25:40,960 --> 00:25:44,800 Speaker 1: might see an announcement within the next couple of weeks, 358 00:25:45,160 --> 00:25:47,840 Speaker 1: if not the next couple of days, because Mandela, i 359 00:25:47,880 --> 00:25:51,560 Speaker 1: am told, is absolutely itching to get in this race, 360 00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:55,480 Speaker 1: and this poll is only going to add fuel to 361 00:25:55,560 --> 00:26:00,360 Speaker 1: the fire that Mandela is the candidate who Democrats won. Now, 362 00:26:00,440 --> 00:26:04,480 Speaker 1: the big problem with him, of course, is that he 363 00:26:04,640 --> 00:26:08,440 Speaker 1: lost to incumbent Senator Ron Johnson in twenty twenty two 364 00:26:10,119 --> 00:26:13,320 Speaker 1: in what was considered to be a very winnable race. 365 00:26:13,840 --> 00:26:19,320 Speaker 1: Johnson was the number one target of Democrats in twenty 366 00:26:19,359 --> 00:26:25,239 Speaker 1: twenty two, and Mandela missed out. He lost. He was 367 00:26:25,280 --> 00:26:28,600 Speaker 1: not able to ride his former boss, Governor Tony evers 368 00:26:28,720 --> 00:26:33,439 Speaker 1: coattails to victory. And there are some Democrats. Remember the 369 00:26:33,480 --> 00:26:37,800 Speaker 1: field was cleared for mandeadbeat about a week before the 370 00:26:37,840 --> 00:26:44,119 Speaker 1: primary in August of twenty twenty two. The oh gosh, 371 00:26:44,119 --> 00:26:46,560 Speaker 1: what was his name? Alex Lazari, Alex Lasri, the son 372 00:26:46,640 --> 00:26:51,800 Speaker 1: of the former Bucks owner, as well as the current 373 00:26:51,960 --> 00:26:55,440 Speaker 1: Secretary of State who at the time was state treasurer. 374 00:26:55,480 --> 00:26:58,600 Speaker 1: She's now running for lieutenant governor. She dropped out as well. 375 00:26:58,640 --> 00:27:02,480 Speaker 1: They were both told to drop out so that Mandela 376 00:27:02,520 --> 00:27:04,520 Speaker 1: would have a clear path. Well, there are a lot 377 00:27:04,560 --> 00:27:07,280 Speaker 1: of Democrats who think that if they didn't do that, 378 00:27:08,160 --> 00:27:11,800 Speaker 1: and in fact, someone other than Mandela was the candidate, 379 00:27:11,840 --> 00:27:15,600 Speaker 1: that they would have knocked off. Ron Johnson. You're listening 380 00:27:15,640 --> 00:27:19,360 Speaker 1: to the Dan o'donald Show. We will be back shortly 381 00:27:19,520 --> 00:27:24,080 Speaker 1: with more conservative thought, not just talk. It is the 382 00:27:24,280 --> 00:27:28,080 Speaker 1: dano'donald Show. Welcome back to it. We are following some 383 00:27:28,359 --> 00:27:34,200 Speaker 1: breaking news of Fox News exclusive. Former Special Counsul Jack 384 00:27:34,400 --> 00:27:38,959 Speaker 1: Smith was allegedly tracking the private communications and phone calls 385 00:27:39,280 --> 00:27:44,960 Speaker 1: of nearly a dozen Republican Senators, including Wisconsin's Ron Johnson, 386 00:27:45,880 --> 00:27:50,920 Speaker 1: as part of his investigation into the January sixth riots. 387 00:27:51,440 --> 00:27:56,480 Speaker 1: A document reviewed by Fox News Digital reviewed that revealed 388 00:27:56,480 --> 00:28:00,680 Speaker 1: that Smith and his Arctic Frost team investigating Jack January sixth, 389 00:28:00,720 --> 00:28:05,480 Speaker 1: We're allegedly tracking the phone calls of GOP Senators Lindsey Graham, 390 00:28:05,680 --> 00:28:11,600 Speaker 1: Marsha Blackburn, Ron Johnson, Josh Hawley, Cynthia Lummis, Bill Haggerty, 391 00:28:12,040 --> 00:28:17,880 Speaker 1: Dan Sullivan, Tommy Tuberville, and Mike Kelly. The document, recently 392 00:28:17,920 --> 00:28:22,200 Speaker 1: discovered by FBI Director Cash Pattel and exclusively obtained by 393 00:28:22,240 --> 00:28:28,680 Speaker 1: Fox News Digital is titled CAST or CAST Assistance, dated 394 00:28:28,720 --> 00:28:31,960 Speaker 1: September twenty seventh, twenty twenty three. CAST refers to the 395 00:28:32,080 --> 00:28:38,640 Speaker 1: FBI's Cellular Analysis Survey Team. The document, which has the 396 00:28:38,720 --> 00:28:42,920 Speaker 1: names of FBI agents involved redacted, marks the case ideas 397 00:28:43,040 --> 00:28:49,080 Speaker 1: Arctic Frost Election law Matters Sensitive Investigative Matter CAST. The 398 00:28:49,120 --> 00:28:52,360 Speaker 1: document states the names of the lawmakers and that an 399 00:28:52,520 --> 00:28:58,920 Speaker 1: FBI special agent on Smith's team conducted preliminary toll analysis 400 00:28:59,040 --> 00:29:04,040 Speaker 1: on the toll records associated with the lawmakers. An FBI 401 00:29:04,120 --> 00:29:06,920 Speaker 1: official told Fox News Digital that Smith and his team 402 00:29:07,000 --> 00:29:10,240 Speaker 1: tracking the senators were able to see which phone numbers 403 00:29:10,320 --> 00:29:15,080 Speaker 1: they called, the location the phone call originated, and the 404 00:29:15,160 --> 00:29:19,880 Speaker 1: location where it was received. A source said the calls 405 00:29:19,920 --> 00:29:23,120 Speaker 1: were likely in reference to the vote to certify the 406 00:29:23,160 --> 00:29:27,560 Speaker 1: twenty twenty election. An official said the records were collected 407 00:29:27,600 --> 00:29:30,160 Speaker 1: in twenty twenty three by Smith and his team after 408 00:29:30,200 --> 00:29:35,320 Speaker 1: subpoenaing major telephone provider's Arctic Frost was opened inside the Bureau. 409 00:29:35,440 --> 00:29:39,040 Speaker 1: April thirteenth, twenty twenty two, Smith was appointed as special 410 00:29:39,080 --> 00:29:43,080 Speaker 1: council to take over the probe. In November of twenty 411 00:29:43,280 --> 00:29:48,280 Speaker 1: twenty two, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino briefed those lawmakers 412 00:29:48,320 --> 00:29:53,000 Speaker 1: on the discovery of Smith's surveillance. This afternoon, they just 413 00:29:53,120 --> 00:29:57,479 Speaker 1: got out of that briefing and held an impromptu news 414 00:29:57,600 --> 00:30:02,520 Speaker 1: conference that Fox News was over the last ten or 415 00:30:02,560 --> 00:30:05,560 Speaker 1: fifteen minutes. This, I don't think I need to tell 416 00:30:05,600 --> 00:30:11,680 Speaker 1: you is a very, very, very big deal. This was 417 00:30:11,720 --> 00:30:18,560 Speaker 1: a political prosecution from the start, and it is made 418 00:30:18,720 --> 00:30:22,280 Speaker 1: all the more obvious by the fact that it wasn't 419 00:30:22,360 --> 00:30:25,480 Speaker 1: until November of twenty twenty two. Do you remember what 420 00:30:25,640 --> 00:30:29,920 Speaker 1: was significant about that month wasn't just a midterm election. 421 00:30:30,600 --> 00:30:33,959 Speaker 1: It was also the month that Donald Trump, shortly after 422 00:30:34,000 --> 00:30:37,200 Speaker 1: that midterm election, formally announced that he would be running 423 00:30:37,200 --> 00:30:40,520 Speaker 1: for president again in twenty twenty four. It was at 424 00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:46,440 Speaker 1: that moment that every investigation federal and state into Trump 425 00:30:46,760 --> 00:30:51,520 Speaker 1: ramped up. Now we have evidence that this same special 426 00:30:51,560 --> 00:30:55,000 Speaker 1: prosecutor just happened to be named by the Biden administration 427 00:30:55,200 --> 00:30:58,840 Speaker 1: by Merrick Garland, the Attorney General, in the exact same 428 00:30:58,880 --> 00:31:02,080 Speaker 1: month that President Trump announces that he's running for president again. 429 00:31:02,600 --> 00:31:08,840 Speaker 1: We have that council a year later, looking into the 430 00:31:08,880 --> 00:31:15,080 Speaker 1: phone calls of United States Senators. For what reason was 431 00:31:15,120 --> 00:31:19,880 Speaker 1: he going to potentially criminally charge them with the quote 432 00:31:19,960 --> 00:31:25,920 Speaker 1: unquote fake electors plot. It's entirely possible. Ron Johnson, you 433 00:31:26,000 --> 00:31:29,480 Speaker 1: might remember, was at the very center of that. There 434 00:31:29,480 --> 00:31:32,480 Speaker 1: are still Democrats to this day who believe that the 435 00:31:32,480 --> 00:31:36,280 Speaker 1: facil my goodness, there are at Jim Troopis is criminally 436 00:31:36,360 --> 00:31:40,760 Speaker 1: charged in Wisconsin with the quote unquote fake elector's plot. 437 00:31:41,320 --> 00:31:43,480 Speaker 1: I don't know how many times over the last several 438 00:31:43,600 --> 00:31:46,920 Speaker 1: years I've had to explain to this to Libs who 439 00:31:46,960 --> 00:31:50,360 Speaker 1: still don't get it. This was an alternate slate of electors. 440 00:31:50,920 --> 00:31:54,720 Speaker 1: There was nothing illegal about any of that. At the 441 00:31:54,880 --> 00:31:58,960 Speaker 1: time when those electors met at the state capitol, the 442 00:31:59,000 --> 00:32:02,120 Speaker 1: Republican Party put out a press release about it. For 443 00:32:02,160 --> 00:32:06,440 Speaker 1: goodness sakes, there were still open cases before the United 444 00:32:06,480 --> 00:32:11,840 Speaker 1: States Supreme Court and the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which meant 445 00:32:12,040 --> 00:32:16,800 Speaker 1: that the results of the twenty twenty presidential election were 446 00:32:16,960 --> 00:32:24,000 Speaker 1: absolutely not set in stone. Yet, the idea that this 447 00:32:24,240 --> 00:32:29,560 Speaker 1: was somehow some sort of criminal conspiracy that would necessitate 448 00:32:29,800 --> 00:32:34,600 Speaker 1: the tracking of cell phone records of sitting United States 449 00:32:34,640 --> 00:32:39,800 Speaker 1: senators is frankly insulting and I hope there is much 450 00:32:39,880 --> 00:32:42,440 Speaker 1: more released on this. We named the unhinged Liberal of 451 00:32:42,480 --> 00:32:45,520 Speaker 1: the day. Check in with Dave Spono next, Welcome back 452 00:32:45,560 --> 00:32:47,800 Speaker 1: to the Dan O'Donnell show Ton Now to name the 453 00:32:48,120 --> 00:33:01,280 Speaker 1: unhinged liberal of the day. Nazi Germany. Oh, tough is 454 00:33:01,360 --> 00:33:08,040 Speaker 1: dangerous because he's evil. America is in Oh. I was 455 00:33:08,080 --> 00:33:10,479 Speaker 1: going to go in a completely different direction with this, 456 00:33:10,600 --> 00:33:13,640 Speaker 1: but I think it's gotta be Former Special counsel Jack 457 00:33:14,000 --> 00:33:18,560 Speaker 1: Smith breaking news this hour. He tracked the private communications 458 00:33:18,600 --> 00:33:22,560 Speaker 1: and phone calls of nearly a dozen GOP senators during 459 00:33:22,640 --> 00:33:28,800 Speaker 1: the January sixth probe. This according to the FBI. Among 460 00:33:28,920 --> 00:33:35,000 Speaker 1: those senators Wisconsin's own Ron Johnson. This is a Fox 461 00:33:35,160 --> 00:33:42,080 Speaker 1: News Digital exclusive. Those senators, including Johnson, just spoke registering 462 00:33:42,120 --> 00:33:46,440 Speaker 1: their outrage that they were being tracked after Smith was 463 00:33:46,560 --> 00:33:51,240 Speaker 1: named Special counsel, oh, just immediately after Donald Trump announced 464 00:33:51,280 --> 00:33:53,680 Speaker 1: that he was going to run for president again in 465 00:33:53,720 --> 00:33:59,760 Speaker 1: November of twenty twenty two. Jack Smith is your unhinged 466 00:34:00,320 --> 00:34:02,720 Speaker 1: of the day. That's kind of less unhinged thing. He 467 00:34:02,840 --> 00:34:08,480 Speaker 1: is your diabolical liberal of the day, that's probably more appropriate. 468 00:34:08,960 --> 00:34:11,880 Speaker 1: Joining us now to help you know the difference between 469 00:34:12,200 --> 00:34:16,760 Speaker 1: financial advisors, know what impact the government shutdown is having 470 00:34:16,800 --> 00:34:20,040 Speaker 1: on your bottom line. He is the CEO of ANX 471 00:34:20,040 --> 00:34:23,279 Speaker 1: Wealth Management. Dave spot out joining us now and Dave, 472 00:34:23,480 --> 00:34:27,080 Speaker 1: it doesn't seem like there's any impact that the shutdown 473 00:34:27,160 --> 00:34:29,880 Speaker 1: is having on markets, and it generally doesn't. 474 00:34:29,960 --> 00:34:32,520 Speaker 3: Dan, you know, sometimes you just think it's just kabuki 475 00:34:32,640 --> 00:34:36,800 Speaker 3: theater that the government shuts down. In fact, stocks usually 476 00:34:36,960 --> 00:34:40,799 Speaker 3: go up during government shutdowns. In fact, since nineteen eighty, 477 00:34:40,840 --> 00:34:44,120 Speaker 3: there's been approximately fifteen times that the government is air 478 00:34:44,200 --> 00:34:48,920 Speaker 3: quote radio theater here has shut down, and seventy percent 479 00:34:49,040 --> 00:34:53,840 Speaker 3: of that of those times, stocks have risen during the shutdown. 480 00:34:54,160 --> 00:34:57,719 Speaker 3: In fact, one year after this point, Dan s and 481 00:34:57,800 --> 00:35:01,239 Speaker 3: P five hundred is up over fifteen percent. So we're 482 00:35:01,280 --> 00:35:03,760 Speaker 3: starting to see markets hit new high as we saw 483 00:35:03,800 --> 00:35:07,400 Speaker 3: another one here just moments ago, and really what was 484 00:35:07,520 --> 00:35:11,000 Speaker 3: really weird on the same time, dan is gold continues 485 00:35:11,120 --> 00:35:15,320 Speaker 3: to go up and found closing it's forty second high. 486 00:35:15,360 --> 00:35:18,840 Speaker 1: Can you explain that one to me because usually gold 487 00:35:19,280 --> 00:35:21,719 Speaker 1: is a big one when the market is down. 488 00:35:22,719 --> 00:35:24,400 Speaker 3: That is right, and I think what's happening at the 489 00:35:24,440 --> 00:35:26,560 Speaker 3: same time is you can see what's happening with debt 490 00:35:26,640 --> 00:35:28,200 Speaker 3: in this country, and we can you and I could 491 00:35:28,200 --> 00:35:31,040 Speaker 3: do a whole show on that. But thirty seven trillion 492 00:35:31,080 --> 00:35:34,879 Speaker 3: dollars in debt suggest that there's should be an alternative 493 00:35:34,960 --> 00:35:38,120 Speaker 3: currency or someone is just running for a store or 494 00:35:38,160 --> 00:35:40,719 Speaker 3: of wealth, and that's really what's happening with gold. So 495 00:35:40,760 --> 00:35:43,680 Speaker 3: you see the dollar with debt, you think that the 496 00:35:43,719 --> 00:35:46,480 Speaker 3: dollar is going to get devaluated, and it probably is 497 00:35:46,560 --> 00:35:49,239 Speaker 3: headed in that direction in the longer term. That is 498 00:35:49,280 --> 00:35:50,960 Speaker 3: the reason why you start to see gold. At the 499 00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:55,359 Speaker 3: same time, the cryptocurrency market has heated up as well. 500 00:35:55,400 --> 00:35:58,400 Speaker 3: So all of that put together, you have gold rising 501 00:35:58,640 --> 00:36:01,759 Speaker 3: and equities rising at the same time interest rates are 502 00:36:01,760 --> 00:36:05,759 Speaker 3: coming down, taxes are coming down. It really argues Dan 503 00:36:06,080 --> 00:36:08,040 Speaker 3: for knowing what you own, in other words, what is 504 00:36:08,080 --> 00:36:10,920 Speaker 3: in your portfolio and why is it there. Tech companies 505 00:36:10,960 --> 00:36:14,400 Speaker 3: continue to do well. We saw what happened in the 506 00:36:14,480 --> 00:36:17,480 Speaker 3: AI business today, and in fact this morning we saw 507 00:36:17,520 --> 00:36:21,360 Speaker 3: a bank merger between Fifth Third in Coomerica, so a 508 00:36:21,400 --> 00:36:24,520 Speaker 3: lot of activity is going on. Portfolios have to be 509 00:36:24,600 --> 00:36:27,440 Speaker 3: set up to take advantage of what's happening in the 510 00:36:27,480 --> 00:36:30,239 Speaker 3: real world. Align that with your estate plan and your 511 00:36:30,280 --> 00:36:33,799 Speaker 3: tax plan, and then you have a wealth management relationship. 512 00:36:33,880 --> 00:36:36,879 Speaker 1: And that's why we always encourage you to do so. 513 00:36:37,040 --> 00:36:41,840 Speaker 1: At annexwealth dot com. I do it. I think you 514 00:36:41,920 --> 00:36:46,279 Speaker 1: should too. You get someone working within for you as 515 00:36:46,320 --> 00:36:49,520 Speaker 1: a fee only fiduciary that's not there to sell you 516 00:36:49,640 --> 00:36:53,759 Speaker 1: a product and investment product, but rather is there to 517 00:36:53,880 --> 00:36:58,080 Speaker 1: listen to you and to ensure that you are doing 518 00:36:58,120 --> 00:37:01,000 Speaker 1: all you can with your family's future, and that ultimately 519 00:37:01,120 --> 00:37:05,120 Speaker 1: is what this is all about annexwealth dot com. Dave 520 00:37:05,239 --> 00:37:08,080 Speaker 1: always appreciated my friend. Thank you very much. 521 00:37:08,360 --> 00:37:09,120 Speaker 4: Yeah, thank you, Dan. 522 00:37:09,200 --> 00:37:11,919 Speaker 3: I'm just jumping out of the studio and headed down 523 00:37:11,960 --> 00:37:13,560 Speaker 3: to watch some baseball. 524 00:37:13,600 --> 00:37:16,640 Speaker 1: Okay, you're going down there, all right? All right? Yeah, 525 00:37:16,719 --> 00:37:20,480 Speaker 1: go brew Crewe big game Game two against the Chicago 526 00:37:20,600 --> 00:37:23,319 Speaker 1: Cubs tonight. You had the rare day off yesterday because 527 00:37:23,320 --> 00:37:27,520 Speaker 1: of NFL football eighth eight pm. Don't stay up too 528 00:37:27,600 --> 00:37:30,960 Speaker 1: much past your bedtime, Dave, but enjoy it down there. 529 00:37:31,120 --> 00:37:31,920 Speaker 4: Yeah. 530 00:37:31,960 --> 00:37:34,960 Speaker 1: I really wanted. Well, I suppose I could head down there. 531 00:37:35,000 --> 00:37:38,600 Speaker 1: My kids have soccer games, but they would be done 532 00:37:38,880 --> 00:37:43,080 Speaker 1: hopefully before eight oh eight pm, but that might be 533 00:37:43,120 --> 00:37:46,920 Speaker 1: a little bit past my bedtime, all right, coming up 534 00:37:47,000 --> 00:37:52,480 Speaker 1: the daily Trump date. Also an insanely lenient sentence for 535 00:37:52,640 --> 00:37:56,399 Speaker 1: the would be assassin of Brett Kavanaugh, and massive controversy 536 00:37:56,400 --> 00:38:00,480 Speaker 1: in the Virginia Attorney General's race with a Democrat wishing 537 00:38:00,600 --> 00:38:05,400 Speaker 1: Republicans dead. All that coming up. Four o'clock hour underway. 538 00:38:05,640 --> 00:38:09,160 Speaker 1: Right now, you're on the Dan o'donald Show. Welcome back 539 00:38:09,360 --> 00:38:12,160 Speaker 1: to it once again. We had not won but two 540 00:38:12,200 --> 00:38:17,480 Speaker 1: winners in the Fall Fortune Cash Contest on Friday afternoon. First, 541 00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:20,919 Speaker 1: James was listening to us in Milwaukee in the three 542 00:38:20,960 --> 00:38:24,400 Speaker 1: o'clock hour he won a thousand bucks. Then at five 543 00:38:24,719 --> 00:38:30,400 Speaker 1: Nathan from Germantown. He also won one thousand dollars. Earlier 544 00:38:30,400 --> 00:38:32,480 Speaker 1: in the week, we had a listener on thirteen to 545 00:38:32,680 --> 00:38:39,040 Speaker 1: ten Wiba be the correct or be picked nationally out 546 00:38:39,080 --> 00:38:42,120 Speaker 1: of all of the entries and one. So suffice it 547 00:38:42,200 --> 00:38:44,920 Speaker 1: to say, a really really good first week in the 548 00:38:44,960 --> 00:38:48,760 Speaker 1: Fall Fortune Cash Contest for Dan o'donald listeners. Your second 549 00:38:48,840 --> 00:38:52,880 Speaker 1: chance to win today is right now. All you have 550 00:38:52,920 --> 00:38:55,000 Speaker 1: to do is go to our website and enter the 551 00:38:55,080 --> 00:39:00,799 Speaker 1: keyword deposit deposit deposit. If you're entry is picked at 552 00:39:00,880 --> 00:39:04,680 Speaker 1: random like our three previous winners, including James, and Nathan 553 00:39:04,880 --> 00:39:08,960 Speaker 1: from Friday, you will win one thousand dollars. It's just 554 00:39:09,040 --> 00:39:11,840 Speaker 1: the second week of this contest. We're playing all the 555 00:39:11,880 --> 00:39:15,800 Speaker 1: way through Friday, November fourteenth, so more than a month 556 00:39:16,080 --> 00:39:20,120 Speaker 1: still to go. In the Fall Fortune Cash Contest. Usually 557 00:39:20,120 --> 00:39:23,840 Speaker 1: we end that the Friday before Thanksgiving Day. I guess 558 00:39:24,080 --> 00:39:26,640 Speaker 1: we're ending it a week early, but I think we 559 00:39:26,719 --> 00:39:30,279 Speaker 1: started a week early, so plenty of chances to win. 560 00:39:30,360 --> 00:39:35,320 Speaker 1: We play nine am to five pm each and every weekday. 561 00:39:35,360 --> 00:39:37,680 Speaker 1: Good luck to you all. If you'd like to join 562 00:39:37,719 --> 00:39:40,480 Speaker 1: The Dan o'donalds Show four one, four seven, nine to 563 00:39:40,560 --> 00:39:43,360 Speaker 1: nine eleven thirty is our atvennos dot com talk and 564 00:39:43,719 --> 00:39:47,520 Speaker 1: text line. You can also email me dood at iHeartMedia 565 00:39:47,680 --> 00:39:52,520 Speaker 1: dot com at dano'donaldshow. Across social media, Facebook, Instagram and 566 00:39:53,040 --> 00:39:56,839 Speaker 1: x as well, and of course, if you like the show, 567 00:39:56,880 --> 00:40:00,960 Speaker 1: please do subscribe to the show. Follow the show on iHeartRadio, 568 00:40:01,000 --> 00:40:06,600 Speaker 1: the Dan O'Donnell's Show there, or wherever you listen to podcasts. 569 00:40:06,640 --> 00:40:09,799 Speaker 1: The government is shut down, but there is still a 570 00:40:09,840 --> 00:40:13,680 Speaker 1: whole lot going on in President Trump's Washington. Let's get 571 00:40:13,719 --> 00:40:17,200 Speaker 1: you caught up. It's the Daily Trump Day. We're gonna 572 00:40:17,200 --> 00:40:20,000 Speaker 1: win so much. You may even get tired of winning. 573 00:40:20,080 --> 00:40:23,160 Speaker 1: Trump just keeps winning. It is a win for the administration. 574 00:40:23,360 --> 00:40:26,640 Speaker 1: It's also a big win for the United States. We 575 00:40:26,719 --> 00:40:29,640 Speaker 1: have to keep winning. We have to win more. We're 576 00:40:29,640 --> 00:40:34,200 Speaker 1: gonna win more. Yeah, that shutdown really does show no 577 00:40:34,440 --> 00:40:38,680 Speaker 1: signs of ending anytime soon. In a press briefing today, 578 00:40:38,680 --> 00:40:42,680 Speaker 1: White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt says President Trump's top 579 00:40:42,800 --> 00:40:47,719 Speaker 1: priority continues to be getting that clean continuing resolution to 580 00:40:47,960 --> 00:40:52,000 Speaker 1: fund government until November twenty first, or if there can 581 00:40:52,080 --> 00:40:55,479 Speaker 1: be a continuing resolution for longer funding. It just needs 582 00:40:55,480 --> 00:40:58,640 Speaker 1: to be clean, meaning it needs to simply fund government. 583 00:40:58,760 --> 00:41:02,600 Speaker 1: It cannot have any policy or anything like that in it. 584 00:41:02,640 --> 00:41:08,360 Speaker 1: But the President does remain committed to health care improvements 585 00:41:08,400 --> 00:41:10,600 Speaker 1: for Americans. This is the Democrats when you're talking. But 586 00:41:10,760 --> 00:41:13,560 Speaker 1: of course there will be no health care for illegals. 587 00:41:13,960 --> 00:41:17,880 Speaker 1: But healthcare is, indeed, says Levitt, a priority. 588 00:41:17,920 --> 00:41:21,480 Speaker 5: The President is definitely committed to fixing and improving our 589 00:41:21,520 --> 00:41:24,600 Speaker 5: healthcare system. You saw it again last week when he 590 00:41:24,719 --> 00:41:28,080 Speaker 5: had one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world 591 00:41:28,440 --> 00:41:31,160 Speaker 5: coming into the Oval Office and promising to lower drug 592 00:41:31,239 --> 00:41:35,480 Speaker 5: prices by two hundred three hundred one hundred percent in 593 00:41:35,520 --> 00:41:38,680 Speaker 5: many cases for various types of drugs for American patients. 594 00:41:38,920 --> 00:41:40,600 Speaker 6: That is a huge fix to. 595 00:41:40,600 --> 00:41:43,280 Speaker 5: A broken system that has been ripping off the American 596 00:41:43,320 --> 00:41:45,680 Speaker 5: people for far too long. So the President's very committed 597 00:41:45,680 --> 00:41:48,080 Speaker 5: to this, but right now we need to reopen the 598 00:41:48,080 --> 00:41:51,319 Speaker 5: federal government, and the President is remaining very firm in 599 00:41:51,320 --> 00:41:51,840 Speaker 5: that position. 600 00:41:51,920 --> 00:41:56,040 Speaker 1: Now, we're going to get into in much greater depth 601 00:41:56,120 --> 00:42:00,000 Speaker 1: than just a minute or so, why exactly it is 602 00:42:00,480 --> 00:42:06,600 Speaker 1: that health care prices did skyrocket. Basically, Obamacare has been 603 00:42:06,640 --> 00:42:11,960 Speaker 1: an unmitigated disaster since it was first enacted in January 604 00:42:12,040 --> 00:42:17,239 Speaker 1: of twenty fourteen, and the subsidies that went into effect 605 00:42:17,400 --> 00:42:19,880 Speaker 1: in twenty twenty one to try to mask the true 606 00:42:20,400 --> 00:42:24,719 Speaker 1: cost of Obamacare and the true cost of healthcare generally, 607 00:42:25,000 --> 00:42:27,799 Speaker 1: those are said to expire on December thirty first, and 608 00:42:27,880 --> 00:42:30,719 Speaker 1: Democrats desperately want them to continue. So we're going to 609 00:42:30,800 --> 00:42:35,080 Speaker 1: get into this how Democrats are completely to blame for 610 00:42:35,239 --> 00:42:41,120 Speaker 1: skyrocketing health care costs. But Caroline Levitt, meanwhile the press 611 00:42:41,160 --> 00:42:45,160 Speaker 1: briefing today said all of that can be negotiated later. 612 00:42:45,200 --> 00:42:47,840 Speaker 1: Democrats need to get back to the bargaining table to 613 00:42:47,840 --> 00:42:50,640 Speaker 1: get a clean cr bill passed. And get the government 614 00:42:50,760 --> 00:42:51,560 Speaker 1: back open. 615 00:42:51,719 --> 00:42:54,520 Speaker 6: This conversation about layoffs would not be happening right now 616 00:42:54,560 --> 00:42:57,400 Speaker 6: if the Democrats did not vote to shut the government down. 617 00:42:57,719 --> 00:43:00,360 Speaker 6: And as I also said last briefing, is wow, we 618 00:43:00,400 --> 00:43:03,600 Speaker 6: are thirty seven trillion dollars in debt and the government 619 00:43:03,640 --> 00:43:06,359 Speaker 6: is not receiving any cash. So someone has to look 620 00:43:06,360 --> 00:43:08,680 Speaker 6: at the balance sheet and be good stewards of the 621 00:43:08,680 --> 00:43:12,680 Speaker 6: American taxpayer dollar, and layoffs are an unfortunate consequence of that. 622 00:43:13,120 --> 00:43:17,880 Speaker 1: Meanwhile, today Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is trying to keep 623 00:43:18,120 --> 00:43:22,040 Speaker 1: ice agents out of his city with a new executive 624 00:43:22,160 --> 00:43:27,000 Speaker 1: order creating I kid you, not ice free zones. 625 00:43:27,440 --> 00:43:31,520 Speaker 4: Today we are signing an executive order aimed at reining 626 00:43:31,560 --> 00:43:35,920 Speaker 4: in this out of control administration. The order establishes ice 627 00:43:36,200 --> 00:43:42,640 Speaker 4: free zones. That means that city property and unwilling private 628 00:43:42,719 --> 00:43:47,640 Speaker 4: businesses will no longer serve as staging grounds for these raids. 629 00:43:47,920 --> 00:43:51,759 Speaker 1: It is somewhat stunning what a buffoon this guy is 630 00:43:51,800 --> 00:43:54,680 Speaker 1: and what a disaster he has been for I never 631 00:43:54,760 --> 00:43:57,920 Speaker 1: thought I would pine for the days of Ram and Manuel, 632 00:43:58,280 --> 00:44:01,759 Speaker 1: but alas here we are are after Lightfoot, and now 633 00:44:01,800 --> 00:44:06,240 Speaker 1: this clown who's some somehow a million times worse. Levitt, 634 00:44:06,280 --> 00:44:10,640 Speaker 1: in her press briefing earlier this afternoon, responded to that, 635 00:44:11,280 --> 00:44:16,560 Speaker 1: as well as the continuing resistance to having federal support 636 00:44:16,600 --> 00:44:19,160 Speaker 1: for local law enforcement in cities like Chicago, as well 637 00:44:19,200 --> 00:44:22,719 Speaker 1: as a judge's ruling out of Oregon preventing federal assistance 638 00:44:22,880 --> 00:44:25,120 Speaker 1: with law enforcement in Portland. 639 00:44:25,360 --> 00:44:27,880 Speaker 5: It's a shame that we see in some cities across 640 00:44:27,880 --> 00:44:31,359 Speaker 5: the country that their mayors are just simply refusing to 641 00:44:31,440 --> 00:44:34,319 Speaker 5: cooperate because they don't like Donald Trump. And that's what 642 00:44:34,360 --> 00:44:36,680 Speaker 5: this boils down to. And I don't think any American 643 00:44:36,719 --> 00:44:40,759 Speaker 5: would disagree that Chicago needs more law enforcement reinforcements, that 644 00:44:40,800 --> 00:44:43,359 Speaker 5: they need more resources. Look at this headline from over 645 00:44:43,360 --> 00:44:46,360 Speaker 5: the weekend. At least thirty people shop during the weekend 646 00:44:46,520 --> 00:44:50,200 Speaker 5: in Democrat run Chicago. Five of them were killed in 647 00:44:50,280 --> 00:44:53,439 Speaker 5: one weekend. This is completely unacceptable, and the President wants 648 00:44:53,480 --> 00:44:55,839 Speaker 5: to make American city safer and he's willing to work 649 00:44:55,880 --> 00:44:56,680 Speaker 5: with anyone to do it. 650 00:44:57,080 --> 00:45:01,719 Speaker 1: Ladies and gentlemen, that is your update on what is 651 00:45:01,760 --> 00:45:04,640 Speaker 1: going on in Donald Trump's Washington. It's a segment we 652 00:45:04,719 --> 00:45:09,080 Speaker 1: call the Daily Trump Day. As I said, Democrats now 653 00:45:09,120 --> 00:45:11,279 Speaker 1: have a new narrative. You see they are fighting for 654 00:45:11,400 --> 00:45:15,160 Speaker 1: health care. They're fighting for health care for everyone now. 655 00:45:15,560 --> 00:45:19,719 Speaker 1: Before it was this government needs to shut down. I 656 00:45:19,719 --> 00:45:22,480 Speaker 1: can remember back in March when Democrats did actually go 657 00:45:22,560 --> 00:45:26,400 Speaker 1: along with a clean continuing resolution to fund government, that 658 00:45:26,480 --> 00:45:29,320 Speaker 1: we needed to shut down the government because President Trump 659 00:45:29,600 --> 00:45:34,080 Speaker 1: is a fascist and he is destroying America before our 660 00:45:34,280 --> 00:45:39,600 Speaker 1: very eyes. Now Democrats are saying, look, Trump is about 661 00:45:39,640 --> 00:45:42,759 Speaker 1: to make healthcare way more expensive. We want to keep 662 00:45:42,800 --> 00:45:46,880 Speaker 1: health care costs down. Now they're lying about all of this. 663 00:45:47,080 --> 00:45:49,120 Speaker 1: Of course, the biggest lie is that we don't want 664 00:45:49,200 --> 00:45:53,600 Speaker 1: health care for illegal aliens. It is literally right there 665 00:45:53,719 --> 00:45:57,240 Speaker 1: on page fifty seven of their one point five trillion 666 00:45:57,280 --> 00:46:01,000 Speaker 1: dollar continuing resolution. Seriously, go to page fifty if you've 667 00:46:01,000 --> 00:46:03,400 Speaker 1: got that cr handy, as I'm sure most of you do, 668 00:46:03,480 --> 00:46:07,360 Speaker 1: flip to page fifty seven and they repeal the section 669 00:46:07,480 --> 00:46:12,279 Speaker 1: of the one Big Beautiful Bill that prohibited illegal aliens 670 00:46:12,360 --> 00:46:16,400 Speaker 1: from getting medicaid. Clearly, they want illegal aliens to get medicaid. 671 00:46:16,600 --> 00:46:20,239 Speaker 1: We went over this at nauseum. How illegal aliens are 672 00:46:20,320 --> 00:46:24,080 Speaker 1: presenting at emergency rooms, which are not allowed to turn 673 00:46:24,200 --> 00:46:27,799 Speaker 1: anyone away regardless of citizenship status or ability to pay 674 00:46:27,880 --> 00:46:31,360 Speaker 1: or anything like this, and Let's be clear here that 675 00:46:31,480 --> 00:46:35,840 Speaker 1: is objectively a good thing. We want hospitals to be 676 00:46:36,000 --> 00:46:39,520 Speaker 1: getting people better, we want them to be treating gunshot wounds, 677 00:46:39,520 --> 00:46:42,440 Speaker 1: we want them to be treating serious medical illnesses. The 678 00:46:42,560 --> 00:46:46,160 Speaker 1: problem is is that they are getting reimbursed by Medicaid. 679 00:46:46,160 --> 00:46:49,320 Speaker 1: And there was a massive and I mean massive spike 680 00:46:50,000 --> 00:46:53,640 Speaker 1: in the amount of money that was being reimbursed to 681 00:46:53,840 --> 00:46:56,760 Speaker 1: these hospitals, and almost all of it, seventy one percent 682 00:46:56,880 --> 00:47:00,960 Speaker 1: I believe last year, was from California, which was clearly 683 00:47:02,320 --> 00:47:06,319 Speaker 1: using this using Medicaid money meaning your tax money, your 684 00:47:06,360 --> 00:47:11,839 Speaker 1: federal tax money, to fund its state healthcare program for illegals. 685 00:47:11,920 --> 00:47:15,880 Speaker 1: So what has gone on forever, and I'm talking decades, 686 00:47:16,160 --> 00:47:19,560 Speaker 1: is illegals when they need to go to the doctor. 687 00:47:19,600 --> 00:47:22,680 Speaker 1: And yes, I'm sure Democrats will point to poll after 688 00:47:22,719 --> 00:47:27,200 Speaker 1: poll they says, well, illegals they seek medical services less often, 689 00:47:27,280 --> 00:47:32,040 Speaker 1: yes they do. But when they have say more serious 690 00:47:32,320 --> 00:47:34,879 Speaker 1: a flu that just won't go away, something like that, 691 00:47:35,320 --> 00:47:38,040 Speaker 1: instead of going to a primary care doctor because they 692 00:47:38,040 --> 00:47:40,520 Speaker 1: don't have health insurance and typically don't have the ability 693 00:47:40,560 --> 00:47:43,279 Speaker 1: to pay on a pocket for it, they'll present at 694 00:47:43,320 --> 00:47:47,719 Speaker 1: emergency rooms with something that is very clearly not an 695 00:47:47,719 --> 00:47:51,719 Speaker 1: emergency knowing full well that they are going to have 696 00:47:51,800 --> 00:47:56,359 Speaker 1: to be treated. This is very well known, incredibly well known, 697 00:47:56,480 --> 00:47:59,640 Speaker 1: and anybody who has ever been in an emergency room 698 00:48:00,120 --> 00:48:03,279 Speaker 1: over the past several decades understands that this is a 699 00:48:03,440 --> 00:48:06,319 Speaker 1: big reason why they're so crowded and why it takes 700 00:48:06,520 --> 00:48:10,560 Speaker 1: several hours to get treated at an emergency room. But 701 00:48:11,719 --> 00:48:15,000 Speaker 1: Democrats are also lying, and I mean lying through their 702 00:48:15,120 --> 00:48:18,960 Speaker 1: teeth about why it is that healthcare is about to 703 00:48:19,000 --> 00:48:22,160 Speaker 1: get way more expensive. Well, Donald Trump, he's going to 704 00:48:22,239 --> 00:48:25,680 Speaker 1: use going to jack prices on healthcare to fund his 705 00:48:25,960 --> 00:48:32,280 Speaker 1: millionaire buddies like Elon Musk. That is completely wrong. What's 706 00:48:32,360 --> 00:48:37,400 Speaker 1: going on is temporary subsidies to hide the true cost 707 00:48:37,560 --> 00:48:41,920 Speaker 1: of the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare, are set to 708 00:48:42,000 --> 00:48:47,880 Speaker 1: expire on December thirty. First Obamacare started, Remember, it was 709 00:48:48,239 --> 00:48:52,719 Speaker 1: delayed and delayed and delayed because Democrats didn't want to 710 00:48:52,719 --> 00:48:57,319 Speaker 1: deal with the ramifications of it. It was incredibly politically divisive, 711 00:48:57,960 --> 00:49:01,200 Speaker 1: and it actually led to a Republican getting elected to 712 00:49:01,480 --> 00:49:05,439 Speaker 1: the late Senator Ted Kennedy's seat in Massachusetts of ball Place. 713 00:49:05,520 --> 00:49:08,600 Speaker 1: He of course went down to defeat to Elizabeth Warren, 714 00:49:08,680 --> 00:49:14,040 Speaker 1: but it was incredibly unpopular, and not a single Republican 715 00:49:14,160 --> 00:49:17,399 Speaker 1: signed on to it, and the argument was that it's 716 00:49:17,520 --> 00:49:20,359 Speaker 1: going to drive up the cost of health care, and 717 00:49:20,560 --> 00:49:23,440 Speaker 1: President Obama saying over and over and over again, if 718 00:49:23,480 --> 00:49:25,160 Speaker 1: you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. If 719 00:49:25,200 --> 00:49:26,880 Speaker 1: you like your plan, you can keep your plan. It 720 00:49:26,920 --> 00:49:28,959 Speaker 1: was a lie. It was a flat out lie. In fact, 721 00:49:29,000 --> 00:49:32,520 Speaker 1: in twenty fourteen, it was named as Lie of the 722 00:49:32,640 --> 00:49:37,120 Speaker 1: Year when Obamacare finally went live, because health insurance prices 723 00:49:37,600 --> 00:49:43,080 Speaker 1: immediately skyrocketed, and the big reason for that was that people, 724 00:49:43,160 --> 00:49:48,080 Speaker 1: typically younger Americans, who didn't have health insurance or had 725 00:49:48,160 --> 00:49:53,040 Speaker 1: plans that were remarkably cheap but barely covered anything. Because 726 00:49:53,280 --> 00:49:57,399 Speaker 1: younger Americans were far less likely to have long term 727 00:49:57,480 --> 00:50:01,000 Speaker 1: illnesses or just chronic condition or those sorts of things, 728 00:50:01,000 --> 00:50:06,600 Speaker 1: they weren't using their insurance as much as older Americans. 729 00:50:06,680 --> 00:50:12,960 Speaker 1: So the individual health insurance market before Obamacare sold these cheap, 730 00:50:13,239 --> 00:50:17,719 Speaker 1: less comprehensive plans, and for a lot of people that 731 00:50:17,880 --> 00:50:22,719 Speaker 1: made perfect sense. If you're twenty three years old, you're 732 00:50:22,840 --> 00:50:26,600 Speaker 1: just aut well, remember you're considered a kid until twenty six. 733 00:50:26,719 --> 00:50:29,000 Speaker 1: So let's say you're twenty six, twenty seven years old, 734 00:50:29,239 --> 00:50:32,240 Speaker 1: you're a single guy, You're in perfect health. You don't smoke, 735 00:50:32,320 --> 00:50:35,320 Speaker 1: you're not driving a motorcycle, you're not doing risky things. 736 00:50:35,760 --> 00:50:39,239 Speaker 1: You don't have a family history of chronic conditions or 737 00:50:39,280 --> 00:50:44,040 Speaker 1: anything like that. You're just a healthy young person. Chances 738 00:50:44,080 --> 00:50:46,719 Speaker 1: are the only time you're going to the doctor is 739 00:50:46,760 --> 00:50:49,000 Speaker 1: for an annual checkup, and a lot of young people 740 00:50:49,040 --> 00:50:52,400 Speaker 1: don't even do that. So they would get these incredibly 741 00:50:52,800 --> 00:50:59,640 Speaker 1: inexpensive but very spartan health insurance plans. It made sense 742 00:51:00,960 --> 00:51:05,160 Speaker 1: those plans were maybe illegal under Obamacare. If you like 743 00:51:05,239 --> 00:51:10,160 Speaker 1: your plan, bleep you was the actual message coming out 744 00:51:10,200 --> 00:51:12,000 Speaker 1: of the White House. You had to get the more 745 00:51:12,040 --> 00:51:16,120 Speaker 1: expensive plans. So all of a sudden, costs are going 746 00:51:16,200 --> 00:51:19,560 Speaker 1: up for a whole lot of people within seven years 747 00:51:19,600 --> 00:51:25,080 Speaker 1: of Obamacare's passage. By twenty twenty one, Democrats retake the Senate, 748 00:51:25,120 --> 00:51:28,440 Speaker 1: the House, and the White House, and they realize, my goodness, 749 00:51:28,520 --> 00:51:33,440 Speaker 1: people are not able to afford this, so they pass 750 00:51:33,760 --> 00:51:39,680 Speaker 1: during the Biden administration temporary subsidies that would hide the 751 00:51:39,719 --> 00:51:45,040 Speaker 1: true cost of what people would otherwise be paying for Obamacare. 752 00:51:46,680 --> 00:51:51,279 Speaker 1: Democrats want those temporary twenty twenty one subsidies, which will 753 00:51:51,320 --> 00:51:53,040 Speaker 1: expire in just a couple of months at the end 754 00:51:53,040 --> 00:51:56,560 Speaker 1: of the year to continue forever, because they don't want 755 00:51:56,600 --> 00:52:00,440 Speaker 1: people to know just what a disaster Obamacare is, just 756 00:52:00,520 --> 00:52:04,000 Speaker 1: how much it's driven the costs of health care up, 757 00:52:04,360 --> 00:52:08,440 Speaker 1: and just how much they and President Obama and the 758 00:52:08,480 --> 00:52:12,160 Speaker 1: Obama administration lying to the American people about what it 759 00:52:12,200 --> 00:52:15,800 Speaker 1: was Obamacare was going to do. They don't want them 760 00:52:15,960 --> 00:52:21,360 Speaker 1: catching on. So this is the utterly remarkable thing about 761 00:52:21,360 --> 00:52:24,480 Speaker 1: Democrats and just their ability to lie through their teeth 762 00:52:24,640 --> 00:52:27,560 Speaker 1: about this stuff. You've got Bernie Sanders going out there, 763 00:52:27,719 --> 00:52:33,320 Speaker 1: health care is too expensive for millions of Americans. Well, yeah, okay, 764 00:52:33,440 --> 00:52:37,680 Speaker 1: I'm sorry. I thought Obamacare was going to fix all that. 765 00:52:38,160 --> 00:52:42,879 Speaker 1: I was specifically told that Obamacare was going to drive 766 00:52:42,960 --> 00:52:45,640 Speaker 1: down the costs of health insurance, that it was going 767 00:52:45,680 --> 00:52:49,520 Speaker 1: to make things more affordable, and it was going to 768 00:52:49,880 --> 00:52:52,800 Speaker 1: just be a panacea, that it was going to cover everybody, 769 00:52:52,800 --> 00:52:54,560 Speaker 1: and everybody was going to have health insurance and we 770 00:52:54,600 --> 00:52:58,680 Speaker 1: were going to live happily. Ever after, well, what happens 771 00:52:58,880 --> 00:53:02,960 Speaker 1: when the government effectively corners a market and takes over 772 00:53:03,000 --> 00:53:06,160 Speaker 1: a market, as obama Care did. A market is big 773 00:53:06,280 --> 00:53:08,960 Speaker 1: as the health insurance industry is something like twenty percent 774 00:53:09,040 --> 00:53:13,239 Speaker 1: of the American economy, and all of a sudden, you 775 00:53:13,280 --> 00:53:19,359 Speaker 1: have got government backing every single dollar that is being 776 00:53:19,400 --> 00:53:23,520 Speaker 1: spent and being reimbursed to hospital companies and to doctors' 777 00:53:23,560 --> 00:53:27,400 Speaker 1: offices and all of that. Well, there's no incentive for 778 00:53:27,520 --> 00:53:31,200 Speaker 1: hospitals or doctors or medical companies to compete on price, now, 779 00:53:31,280 --> 00:53:34,560 Speaker 1: is there? So when there's no incentive to compete on 780 00:53:34,680 --> 00:53:38,080 Speaker 1: price because the government is just going to be paying 781 00:53:38,120 --> 00:53:41,120 Speaker 1: the freight, it's the exact same thing with college tuition. 782 00:53:41,239 --> 00:53:45,319 Speaker 1: The reason that college tuition has gotten so unbelievably high 783 00:53:45,440 --> 00:53:48,160 Speaker 1: is that the government came in and effectively took over 784 00:53:48,280 --> 00:53:51,799 Speaker 1: these student loan market. Well, if you know you're going 785 00:53:51,880 --> 00:53:54,879 Speaker 1: to be paid back, whether it's by the borrower or 786 00:53:55,000 --> 00:53:57,840 Speaker 1: whether it's by the government, these government backed loans, and 787 00:53:58,280 --> 00:54:04,120 Speaker 1: now you've got every presidentdential candidate from twenty sixteen on 788 00:54:04,480 --> 00:54:09,880 Speaker 1: and Biden actually eliminating student loan debt for certain people. 789 00:54:11,400 --> 00:54:15,080 Speaker 1: What's the incentive to lower the costs of college tuition? 790 00:54:15,320 --> 00:54:18,359 Speaker 1: Somebody is going to pay. It's not as though these 791 00:54:18,480 --> 00:54:23,360 Speaker 1: universities are not getting their fifty thousand dollars a year tuitions. 792 00:54:24,440 --> 00:54:28,960 Speaker 1: The issue is that American citizens themselves aren't paying for it. Now, 793 00:54:28,960 --> 00:54:32,200 Speaker 1: this may sound like something of a paradox here, How 794 00:54:32,239 --> 00:54:35,400 Speaker 1: can something be cheaper if the American people are paying 795 00:54:35,400 --> 00:54:37,200 Speaker 1: more of it out of their own pocket. Well, we 796 00:54:37,360 --> 00:54:41,560 Speaker 1: did before the era of government student loans, and we 797 00:54:41,600 --> 00:54:45,440 Speaker 1: did pay out of pocket before the era of government 798 00:54:45,520 --> 00:54:48,920 Speaker 1: controlled health insurance. And when people were paying out of pocket, 799 00:54:49,400 --> 00:54:52,040 Speaker 1: costs were much lower because if you didn't like what 800 00:54:52,120 --> 00:54:55,719 Speaker 1: doctor Smith was charging, you'd go to doctor Jones. If 801 00:54:55,760 --> 00:54:58,160 Speaker 1: you didn't like what he was charging. You had the 802 00:54:58,239 --> 00:55:02,880 Speaker 1: ability to shop around because doctors would buy necessity have 803 00:55:02,920 --> 00:55:04,879 Speaker 1: to compete on price. And it was the same thing 804 00:55:04,960 --> 00:55:09,120 Speaker 1: with universities. If they were charging fifty thousand dollars a 805 00:55:09,200 --> 00:55:13,000 Speaker 1: year intuition and people had to pay fifty thousand dollars 806 00:55:13,120 --> 00:55:16,120 Speaker 1: a year out of pocket, nobody's going to pay it, 807 00:55:16,160 --> 00:55:19,000 Speaker 1: and nobody's going to get to the school and you're 808 00:55:19,040 --> 00:55:21,360 Speaker 1: not going to get your fifty thousand dollars. So instead 809 00:55:21,400 --> 00:55:25,200 Speaker 1: you're charging ten thousand dollars per year and people are 810 00:55:25,239 --> 00:55:27,560 Speaker 1: paying this out and yes it's a big expense, but 811 00:55:27,640 --> 00:55:30,120 Speaker 1: it's nowhere near fifty thousand dollars a year. And the 812 00:55:30,200 --> 00:55:34,200 Speaker 1: exact same thing has happened in the health insurance market, 813 00:55:34,239 --> 00:55:37,080 Speaker 1: and it's like democrats just do not understand this that 814 00:55:37,120 --> 00:55:40,240 Speaker 1: when you take away competition in markets, when you inject 815 00:55:40,480 --> 00:55:47,560 Speaker 1: government and you inject a monopoly and eliminate the relationship 816 00:55:47,760 --> 00:55:51,520 Speaker 1: that the consumer has to the product where the consumer 817 00:55:51,640 --> 00:55:54,600 Speaker 1: is actually putting down his or her hard earned money, 818 00:55:54,640 --> 00:55:57,439 Speaker 1: and the suppliers of the product or in this case 819 00:55:57,480 --> 00:56:01,360 Speaker 1: service health services, they can charge whatever they want because 820 00:56:01,400 --> 00:56:06,120 Speaker 1: the consumer is never going to go elsewhere and they're 821 00:56:06,160 --> 00:56:08,359 Speaker 1: never going to be forced to compete on price. You're 822 00:56:08,400 --> 00:56:11,279 Speaker 1: listening to the Dan o'donald Show. This is what we 823 00:56:11,400 --> 00:56:15,360 Speaker 1: mean when we say conservative thought, not just talk. We 824 00:56:15,480 --> 00:56:17,759 Speaker 1: go a little bit deeper on the issues and we'll 825 00:56:17,800 --> 00:56:22,000 Speaker 1: be back with more inside analysis and irreverence in just 826 00:56:22,040 --> 00:56:31,760 Speaker 1: three minutes. It is the Dan o'donalds Show. Welcome back 827 00:56:31,840 --> 00:56:35,880 Speaker 1: to it. President Trump is now calling on Democrat Virginia 828 00:56:36,000 --> 00:56:41,040 Speaker 1: Attorney General candidate Jay Jones to drop out of the 829 00:56:41,200 --> 00:56:45,720 Speaker 1: race after some texts in twenty twenty two from Jones 830 00:56:46,160 --> 00:56:49,560 Speaker 1: suggested that a former speaker of the Virginia House should 831 00:56:49,719 --> 00:56:55,759 Speaker 1: quote receive two bullets to the head. Not a single Democrat, 832 00:56:56,160 --> 00:56:58,720 Speaker 1: at least none that I am aware of, have called 833 00:56:58,760 --> 00:57:02,879 Speaker 1: for Jones to drop out of this race. It has 834 00:57:03,560 --> 00:57:07,560 Speaker 1: just come out. Trump posted on truth Social yesterday that 835 00:57:07,640 --> 00:57:11,000 Speaker 1: the radical left lunatic Jay Jones, who is running against 836 00:57:11,360 --> 00:57:15,120 Speaker 1: Jason Miarrez, the great Attorney General in Virginia, made sick 837 00:57:15,160 --> 00:57:17,960 Speaker 1: and demented jokes, if they were jokes at all, which 838 00:57:18,000 --> 00:57:22,880 Speaker 1: were not funny. Even Democrats are saying it is resignation 839 00:57:23,080 --> 00:57:26,720 Speaker 1: from campaign territory outa that Jones should drop out of 840 00:57:26,720 --> 00:57:34,560 Speaker 1: the race immediately, and he endorsed Jones's opponent. That's the 841 00:57:34,600 --> 00:57:37,720 Speaker 1: thing Democrats may be saying, Oh, yeah, you know now 842 00:57:37,720 --> 00:57:40,240 Speaker 1: it's time not one of them, that there is no 843 00:57:40,360 --> 00:57:44,160 Speaker 1: concerted effort to get Jones out of this race. House 844 00:57:44,360 --> 00:57:50,600 Speaker 1: Delegate Carrie Poinner, a Republican, shared screenshots of her conversation 845 00:57:50,760 --> 00:57:56,000 Speaker 1: August eighth, twenty twenty two, which he admitted those texts 846 00:57:56,080 --> 00:57:59,720 Speaker 1: were sent to her in error. In an email to 847 00:57:59,760 --> 00:58:03,840 Speaker 1: any newspaper called The Progress Index, Coinner called the messages 848 00:58:03,920 --> 00:58:09,040 Speaker 1: not just disturbing, but disqualifying for anyone who wants to 849 00:58:09,120 --> 00:58:16,120 Speaker 1: seek public office. Jones was upset back in twenty twenty 850 00:58:16,240 --> 00:58:22,480 Speaker 1: two by a former Speaker of the Virginia House, Todd Gilbert, 851 00:58:23,320 --> 00:58:27,720 Speaker 1: and he apparently said there were some comments that were 852 00:58:27,760 --> 00:58:31,400 Speaker 1: attributed to Gilbert on the death of a Democratic delegate, 853 00:58:32,200 --> 00:58:38,320 Speaker 1: and Jones' is is very upset that Coiner leaked this 854 00:58:38,520 --> 00:58:43,480 Speaker 1: to the press. He is not upset about saying of Gilbert. 855 00:58:43,880 --> 00:58:51,200 Speaker 1: Three people, two bullets, Gilbert Hitler and Paul Pott. Gilbert 856 00:58:51,240 --> 00:59:00,360 Speaker 1: gets two bullets to the head. Wow, especially in the 857 00:59:00,760 --> 00:59:06,640 Speaker 1: era of where we are in politics right now, that 858 00:59:07,000 --> 00:59:15,360 Speaker 1: is pretty insane. Now, he didn't stop there. Okay, he 859 00:59:15,440 --> 00:59:22,720 Speaker 1: did not stop there. If he had just stopped there, Okay, 860 00:59:23,640 --> 00:59:26,400 Speaker 1: three people, two bullets, Gilbert Hitler and Polpot, Gilbert gets 861 00:59:26,400 --> 00:59:28,640 Speaker 1: two bullets to the head. Spoiler put Gilbert in the 862 00:59:28,720 --> 00:59:30,520 Speaker 1: crew with the two worst people you know, and he 863 00:59:30,600 --> 00:59:36,760 Speaker 1: received both bullets every time, Jay, please stop, he Respondsloka. 864 00:59:37,760 --> 00:59:41,800 Speaker 1: Then Coiner says, it really bothers me when you talk 865 00:59:41,840 --> 00:59:46,640 Speaker 1: about hurting people or wishing death on them, and then 866 00:59:46,680 --> 00:59:49,240 Speaker 1: they kind of go on, and she says, you weren't 867 00:59:49,240 --> 00:59:52,240 Speaker 1: simply asking questions, and you know it as I genuinely was. 868 00:59:52,280 --> 00:59:55,480 Speaker 1: I wasn't attacking you. I was trying to understand your logic. 869 00:59:55,760 --> 00:59:58,040 Speaker 1: You weren't trying to understand She responds, you were talking 870 00:59:58,120 --> 01:00:04,560 Speaker 1: about hoping Jennifer gilbert children would die. Yes, He responds, 871 01:00:04,680 --> 01:00:08,120 Speaker 1: I've told you this before. Only when people feel pain 872 01:00:08,520 --> 01:00:18,200 Speaker 1: personally do they move on policy. Wow. She then responds 873 01:00:19,040 --> 01:00:22,840 Speaker 1: they go on in this text exchange. I honestly am 874 01:00:22,920 --> 01:00:26,800 Speaker 1: questioning a lot today, Coinner says. Jones said, I mean, 875 01:00:26,880 --> 01:00:29,480 Speaker 1: do I think Todd and Jennifer are evil and that 876 01:00:29,480 --> 01:00:37,080 Speaker 1: they're breeding little fascists? Yes? What so? Not only does 877 01:00:37,120 --> 01:00:42,320 Speaker 1: he want to put two bullets in Gilbert's head, he 878 01:00:42,440 --> 01:00:46,840 Speaker 1: is also wishing death or pain on his young children 879 01:00:46,920 --> 01:00:50,720 Speaker 1: because they're little fascists being raised by the big fascist. 880 01:00:50,840 --> 01:00:54,960 Speaker 1: And in order for Gilbert to move on policy that 881 01:00:55,200 --> 01:01:00,440 Speaker 1: Jones wants moved on, his children need to feel pain. 882 01:01:04,120 --> 01:01:08,959 Speaker 1: I'm sort of at a loss for words here. Yes, 883 01:01:09,000 --> 01:01:13,400 Speaker 1: it's a private conversation. Yes, it was leaked to the 884 01:01:13,440 --> 01:01:17,680 Speaker 1: media in what appears to be an attempt to I mean, 885 01:01:17,720 --> 01:01:23,320 Speaker 1: this is a classic October surprise type of story. But 886 01:01:23,400 --> 01:01:27,080 Speaker 1: I mean this isn't the classic October surprise. Is sort 887 01:01:27,080 --> 01:01:31,360 Speaker 1: of the George W. Bush dui in the two thousand election. 888 01:01:31,440 --> 01:01:33,240 Speaker 1: A couple of weeks might have even been a couple 889 01:01:33,280 --> 01:01:36,720 Speaker 1: of days before the two thousand presidential election. Did that 890 01:01:36,840 --> 01:01:40,720 Speaker 1: have any real bearing on anything in that race. No, 891 01:01:40,800 --> 01:01:43,680 Speaker 1: of course it didn't, but it was a big issue. 892 01:01:43,720 --> 01:01:47,720 Speaker 1: It was apropos of nothing. This is the man who 893 01:01:47,760 --> 01:01:54,000 Speaker 1: wants to be Virginia's top law enforcer openly fantasizing about 894 01:01:54,160 --> 01:01:57,280 Speaker 1: killing the leader of the House of Delegates because he's 895 01:01:57,400 --> 01:02:01,920 Speaker 1: upset that he wasn't sufficiently sad over a Democrat colleague's 896 01:02:01,960 --> 01:02:05,160 Speaker 1: death or said all the right things at the eulogy, 897 01:02:05,240 --> 01:02:08,440 Speaker 1: but really isn't moving on the policy that he wants to, 898 01:02:08,520 --> 01:02:11,840 Speaker 1: and just so that Republicans will come around to the 899 01:02:11,880 --> 01:02:15,520 Speaker 1: lib position on gun control or whatever it is, their 900 01:02:15,640 --> 01:02:18,920 Speaker 1: children need to be killed or feel pay. We are 901 01:02:19,080 --> 01:02:23,120 Speaker 1: a month removed, not even a month removed from the assassination, 902 01:02:23,320 --> 01:02:27,800 Speaker 1: the violent assassination of the most prominent conservative activist in 903 01:02:27,880 --> 01:02:31,120 Speaker 1: America on a college campus in front of the entire country. 904 01:02:31,160 --> 01:02:37,400 Speaker 1: This was the first violent, viral political assassination in American history. 905 01:02:37,440 --> 01:02:41,160 Speaker 1: This was the first political assassination that we saw really 906 01:02:41,360 --> 01:02:46,560 Speaker 1: since the nineteen sixties, late nineteen sixties MLK Junior and 907 01:02:46,560 --> 01:02:49,080 Speaker 1: then just a couple of weeks after that, in nineteen 908 01:02:49,160 --> 01:02:54,200 Speaker 1: sixty eight, Bobby Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy Senior, was assassinate. That's 909 01:02:54,320 --> 01:02:57,320 Speaker 1: the last one before Charlie Kirk. I mean, this was 910 01:02:57,320 --> 01:03:00,760 Speaker 1: a seminal moment in American history. We're taught talking about 911 01:03:00,800 --> 01:03:05,120 Speaker 1: for the well in mainstream media, we were talking about 912 01:03:05,400 --> 01:03:08,919 Speaker 1: violent leftist rhetoric for the better part of I don't 913 01:03:08,960 --> 01:03:14,040 Speaker 1: know ten minutes. I think they got a week, maybe 914 01:03:14,080 --> 01:03:16,760 Speaker 1: a week and a half, and now you just are, 915 01:03:16,960 --> 01:03:19,760 Speaker 1: if you've noticed, less than a month removed from this 916 01:03:20,000 --> 01:03:26,480 Speaker 1: in just incredibly violent assassination that everybody saw on social media. 917 01:03:27,040 --> 01:03:31,080 Speaker 1: When I got home after an incredibly long day on 918 01:03:31,120 --> 01:03:35,600 Speaker 1: September tenth, unfortunately, after having to cover Charlie's assassination as 919 01:03:35,640 --> 01:03:38,520 Speaker 1: it was happening my son's soccer team. It was a 920 01:03:38,560 --> 01:03:42,760 Speaker 1: team dinner before a game the next day, and they 921 01:03:42,800 --> 01:03:45,080 Speaker 1: were all of course talking about this, and they were 922 01:03:45,120 --> 01:03:46,760 Speaker 1: asking me, you know, coach Dan. They all know me 923 01:03:46,760 --> 01:03:49,280 Speaker 1: as coach Dank say, you know coach soccer and know 924 01:03:49,440 --> 01:03:52,240 Speaker 1: all of them through that. They said, Coach Dan, did 925 01:03:52,320 --> 01:03:54,560 Speaker 1: you know Charlie? Yeah, you know, I shown him pictures 926 01:03:54,640 --> 01:03:57,040 Speaker 1: of you know, Charlie and I at the RNC. I 927 01:03:57,040 --> 01:03:58,880 Speaker 1: wouldn't say I know him, but you know I hung 928 01:03:58,920 --> 01:04:01,280 Speaker 1: out with him for a little bit and it seemed 929 01:04:01,280 --> 01:04:03,720 Speaker 1: like a very very nice guy. As tragic. They're all 930 01:04:03,800 --> 01:04:06,120 Speaker 1: showing me and these are like high school seniors and 931 01:04:06,520 --> 01:04:11,240 Speaker 1: on their phones, they're showing Charlie being assassinate. The incredibly 932 01:04:11,480 --> 01:04:14,920 Speaker 1: graphic video that I was hoping and praying when I 933 01:04:14,960 --> 01:04:18,720 Speaker 1: saw it just a couple of minutes after Charlie was shot, 934 01:04:18,720 --> 01:04:22,120 Speaker 1: that this was AI. I was just I said a prayer, 935 01:04:22,240 --> 01:04:26,880 Speaker 1: Please God, let this be artificial intelligence. Let this not 936 01:04:27,040 --> 01:04:30,800 Speaker 1: be true. Unfortunately it was. But they all saw this, 937 01:04:30,920 --> 01:04:35,720 Speaker 1: they lived this. We had a national conversation for maybe 938 01:04:35,840 --> 01:04:39,480 Speaker 1: five minutes in which we tried to both sides this 939 01:04:39,600 --> 01:04:44,680 Speaker 1: thing and say, well, political violence and assassination fantasy is 940 01:04:44,800 --> 01:04:49,439 Speaker 1: a both sides problem when everyone with half a brain 941 01:04:49,520 --> 01:04:54,960 Speaker 1: knows clearly it's not. You have assassination fantasies on the left. 942 01:04:55,440 --> 01:04:57,400 Speaker 1: Not only that, And we're going to get into this 943 01:04:57,640 --> 01:04:59,600 Speaker 1: coming up in just a minute here on the Dan 944 01:04:59,640 --> 01:05:01,280 Speaker 1: o'donn Show. In fact, it's probably a good time. We're 945 01:05:01,320 --> 01:05:03,080 Speaker 1: running late, there's probably a good time for a break. 946 01:05:03,120 --> 01:05:06,200 Speaker 1: We're going to get into the incredibly soft sentence that 947 01:05:06,360 --> 01:05:09,439 Speaker 1: was handed down late Friday evening, just after the Dan 948 01:05:09,480 --> 01:05:13,240 Speaker 1: O'Donnell Show ended in the attempted assassination of Brett Kavanaugh 949 01:05:13,320 --> 01:05:17,920 Speaker 1: and potentially several other Supreme Court justices by a left 950 01:05:17,960 --> 01:05:21,680 Speaker 1: wing judge who sympathized with the fact that the killer 951 01:05:22,400 --> 01:05:26,160 Speaker 1: is trans But you have people in the left wing 952 01:05:26,400 --> 01:05:30,280 Speaker 1: movement who aren't just fantasizing about assassination, who aren't just 953 01:05:30,760 --> 01:05:33,640 Speaker 1: calling their opponents fascists and saying that, oh, this is 954 01:05:33,680 --> 01:05:36,680 Speaker 1: like Hitler. And of course, what do the crazy people 955 01:05:36,720 --> 01:05:40,560 Speaker 1: who want desperately to have their lives have some semblance 956 01:05:40,600 --> 01:05:42,600 Speaker 1: of meaning. Think when they say, well, if I take 957 01:05:42,600 --> 01:05:45,680 Speaker 1: out the fascists, if I take out and you hear 958 01:05:45,720 --> 01:05:48,280 Speaker 1: it with Jones, you hear it with Jones, Well, they're 959 01:05:48,280 --> 01:05:51,960 Speaker 1: fascists who are raising little fascists. So what it's acceptable 960 01:05:52,040 --> 01:05:54,960 Speaker 1: to stop the spread of fascism by killing innocent children 961 01:05:55,840 --> 01:05:59,680 Speaker 1: and even worse, the Democrats are going to stand by this. 962 01:06:01,520 --> 01:06:03,400 Speaker 1: It's almost unbelievab All right, we are going to step 963 01:06:03,440 --> 01:06:06,480 Speaker 1: aside for a break. When we come back, we are 964 01:06:06,560 --> 01:06:11,160 Speaker 1: going to get into the Kavanaugh would be assassin and 965 01:06:11,200 --> 01:06:14,120 Speaker 1: how he just got the break of all breaks. You're 966 01:06:14,120 --> 01:06:25,040 Speaker 1: listening to Dan o'dohner show Republican, Imagine what the outrage 967 01:06:25,080 --> 01:06:28,880 Speaker 1: would be with respect to Jay Jones, who's the Virginia 968 01:06:28,920 --> 01:06:32,880 Speaker 1: Attorney general candidate who is wishing death not just upon 969 01:06:33,240 --> 01:06:38,320 Speaker 1: one of his political opponents, the Republican House of Representatives 970 01:06:39,200 --> 01:06:42,640 Speaker 1: speaker in twenty twenty two, and some texts that were 971 01:06:42,680 --> 01:06:49,120 Speaker 1: made public late last week. But it's instructive not just 972 01:06:49,240 --> 01:06:51,840 Speaker 1: to imagine what the outrage would be, but to just 973 01:06:51,920 --> 01:06:56,400 Speaker 1: imagine any Republicans saying that Republicans typically don't talk like that. 974 01:06:56,440 --> 01:07:02,200 Speaker 1: There isn't this violent revenge fan to see, which inevitably 975 01:07:02,480 --> 01:07:08,760 Speaker 1: includes death not just to the House of Representatives speaker, 976 01:07:09,000 --> 01:07:13,120 Speaker 1: but also his innocent children. Because this guy needs to 977 01:07:13,160 --> 01:07:15,520 Speaker 1: feel pain. I mean, it's truly sick. Welcome back to 978 01:07:15,520 --> 01:07:18,920 Speaker 1: the Dan O'Donnell show. What else is sick? If you 979 01:07:19,000 --> 01:07:23,160 Speaker 1: remember the saga of Nicholas Roski Back in twenty twenty two, 980 01:07:23,880 --> 01:07:26,880 Speaker 1: after the United States Supreme Court opinion in Dobbs v. 981 01:07:27,080 --> 01:07:31,000 Speaker 1: Jackson Women's Health was leaked about a month before it 982 01:07:31,160 --> 01:07:35,520 Speaker 1: was actually released in an obvious effort to rile up 983 01:07:35,560 --> 01:07:39,360 Speaker 1: the left. This, of course, was the opinion that overturned 984 01:07:39,440 --> 01:07:43,320 Speaker 1: Roe v. Wade. This was designed. The leak was entirely 985 01:07:43,480 --> 01:07:47,680 Speaker 1: designed to get the crazies out to put pressure on 986 01:07:48,440 --> 01:07:52,280 Speaker 1: any one of the conservative justices, because it was known 987 01:07:52,360 --> 01:07:54,360 Speaker 1: this was going to be a five to four decision, 988 01:07:54,440 --> 01:07:58,040 Speaker 1: So you only needed to get one of those justices 989 01:07:58,720 --> 01:08:02,080 Speaker 1: to fall off the wagon, or to be physically intimidated 990 01:08:02,200 --> 01:08:04,640 Speaker 1: into falling off the way. And that's exactly what happened. 991 01:08:04,880 --> 01:08:11,920 Speaker 1: Nicholas Rosky flew from California where he lived. He was 992 01:08:12,160 --> 01:08:15,439 Speaker 1: armed to the teeth. He had what pepper spray, a gun, 993 01:08:15,680 --> 01:08:20,080 Speaker 1: zip ties, all sorts of stuff, and he had a 994 01:08:20,080 --> 01:08:24,960 Speaker 1: sudden moment of lucidity. He apparently saw the protection. He 995 01:08:25,000 --> 01:08:28,360 Speaker 1: saw a US marshall outside of Brett Kavanaugh's house in 996 01:08:28,520 --> 01:08:34,080 Speaker 1: Chevy Chase, Maryland, and thought twice about kidnapping and then 997 01:08:34,120 --> 01:08:38,920 Speaker 1: assassinating Brett Cavanaugh. He called his sister. The sister pretty 998 01:08:38,920 --> 01:08:41,760 Speaker 1: obviously told him, hey, Nick, you need to turn yourself in. 999 01:08:41,880 --> 01:08:44,160 Speaker 1: You need to do the right thing. He called nine 1000 01:08:44,200 --> 01:08:46,960 Speaker 1: to one one and said, I am here, I'm outside 1001 01:08:47,000 --> 01:08:51,479 Speaker 1: Brett Kavanaugh's house. I'm going to kill him. Well, he 1002 01:08:51,960 --> 01:08:56,559 Speaker 1: was convicted and he pleaded guilty. Of course, he was 1003 01:08:56,640 --> 01:09:01,080 Speaker 1: sentenced to just eight years in prison. On Friday night, 1004 01:09:02,080 --> 01:09:09,639 Speaker 1: after the Trump Justice Department requested thirty thirty Now one 1005 01:09:09,680 --> 01:09:13,400 Speaker 1: of the reasons cited by the judge, who was of 1006 01:09:13,439 --> 01:09:19,240 Speaker 1: course appointed by President Biden. Her name is Deborah Boardman. 1007 01:09:19,760 --> 01:09:23,360 Speaker 1: He gets ninety seven months in prison from this judge, 1008 01:09:24,200 --> 01:09:30,880 Speaker 1: in large part because Rosky, who now identifies as a 1009 01:09:31,000 --> 01:09:38,920 Speaker 1: woman named Sophie, would not do well in a men's prison. Moreover, 1010 01:09:39,479 --> 01:09:45,639 Speaker 1: she felt that Sophie has shown remorse for her action. 1011 01:09:47,720 --> 01:09:56,599 Speaker 1: Now there has never been apparently a formal legal name change, 1012 01:09:57,280 --> 01:10:03,519 Speaker 1: but his defense counsel to him as miss Rosky in 1013 01:10:03,640 --> 01:10:10,599 Speaker 1: legal filings out of quote respect respect for the would 1014 01:10:10,640 --> 01:10:16,000 Speaker 1: be Brett Kavanaugh assassin. Of course, the media is referring 1015 01:10:16,040 --> 01:10:20,479 Speaker 1: to Rosky as she or they or z zer Zers 1016 01:10:21,120 --> 01:10:24,439 Speaker 1: referring to them as a person or a woman. There's 1017 01:10:24,479 --> 01:10:27,839 Speaker 1: been no legal name change. There's been, to my knowledge, 1018 01:10:27,880 --> 01:10:32,639 Speaker 1: no taxpayer funded surgery. But the fact that it would 1019 01:10:32,720 --> 01:10:36,360 Speaker 1: be assassin what would have been. And it should be 1020 01:10:36,439 --> 01:10:40,360 Speaker 1: noted that he was not only potentially going to stop 1021 01:10:40,400 --> 01:10:44,320 Speaker 1: at Brett Kavanaugh, that he was potentially going to try 1022 01:10:44,360 --> 01:10:48,840 Speaker 1: to take out other conservative Supreme Court justice. Is all 1023 01:10:48,960 --> 01:10:53,160 Speaker 1: to try to prevent Roe v. Wade from being overturned. 1024 01:10:54,600 --> 01:10:59,759 Speaker 1: That's terrorism. This this is a terrorist because he chickened 1025 01:10:59,760 --> 01:11:03,799 Speaker 1: out at the last second, and I've been saying moment 1026 01:11:03,920 --> 01:11:07,559 Speaker 1: of lucidity when he called nine one one on himself 1027 01:11:07,600 --> 01:11:10,719 Speaker 1: where where he had just a temporary moment of Senate 1028 01:11:11,120 --> 01:11:14,519 Speaker 1: This was a well planned well corty. He looked up 1029 01:11:14,600 --> 01:11:18,240 Speaker 1: where Kavanaugh lived. He looked up there. We went over 1030 01:11:18,280 --> 01:11:22,120 Speaker 1: his Google searches when the plea deal and sentencing hearing 1031 01:11:22,160 --> 01:11:24,800 Speaker 1: were announced a while back. We went over all the 1032 01:11:24,840 --> 01:11:28,479 Speaker 1: Google searches of what he was he was planning this attack. 1033 01:11:28,520 --> 01:11:33,040 Speaker 1: He was clearly doing it because he wanted Roe v. 1034 01:11:33,160 --> 01:11:35,040 Speaker 1: Wade to remain the law of the lad He didn't 1035 01:11:35,040 --> 01:11:37,559 Speaker 1: want it to be overturned. Can you believe, also, just 1036 01:11:37,600 --> 01:11:41,200 Speaker 1: as a quick aside, that we still three plus years later, 1037 01:11:41,280 --> 01:11:46,200 Speaker 1: have no idea who leaked this opinion. Really, we have 1038 01:11:46,520 --> 01:11:51,000 Speaker 1: no idea. I'm telling you it was Sonya Soto, mayor's clerk, 1039 01:11:51,680 --> 01:11:58,000 Speaker 1: who previously talked to the various the very reporter from 1040 01:11:58,160 --> 01:12:00,559 Speaker 1: the I think it was Washington Post to this story. 1041 01:12:00,560 --> 01:12:03,040 Speaker 1: I forget the guy's name, but it was pretty obviously him. 1042 01:12:03,080 --> 01:12:05,519 Speaker 1: There was a pre existing relationship. He was one of 1043 01:12:05,600 --> 01:12:07,800 Speaker 1: the few people in the world who would have had 1044 01:12:07,800 --> 01:12:11,439 Speaker 1: access to this draft opinion. In any event, this was 1045 01:12:11,479 --> 01:12:15,360 Speaker 1: a coordinated effort. This guy or gal or whomever actually 1046 01:12:15,479 --> 01:12:21,840 Speaker 1: leaked the document did so with the express desire that 1047 01:12:22,040 --> 01:12:27,800 Speaker 1: maybe Brett Kavanaugh not be killed. But maybe he's intimidated 1048 01:12:28,360 --> 01:12:34,720 Speaker 1: in some way into overturning this position, maybe he is 1049 01:12:35,280 --> 01:12:42,280 Speaker 1: made to fear the consequences of his ruling. Remember this 1050 01:12:42,439 --> 01:12:45,960 Speaker 1: was in the era in twenty twenty two where Democrats 1051 01:12:46,120 --> 01:12:51,679 Speaker 1: were just totally out of control. Back during the first 1052 01:12:51,760 --> 01:12:53,960 Speaker 1: Trump term, they were openly getting in the face of 1053 01:12:54,000 --> 01:12:58,080 Speaker 1: Trump administration officials, all the while egged on by Democrat politicians. 1054 01:12:58,439 --> 01:13:01,920 Speaker 1: Twenty twenty twenty two, this was the era of peak woke, 1055 01:13:02,800 --> 01:13:06,920 Speaker 1: and people, I think forget just how nuts the left 1056 01:13:06,960 --> 01:13:11,320 Speaker 1: went when this draft opinion was leaked and all sorts 1057 01:13:11,360 --> 01:13:13,960 Speaker 1: of rhetoric. What is it? Chuck Schumer himself gets up 1058 01:13:14,000 --> 01:13:17,720 Speaker 1: on the the stairs of the Supreme Court ands, as 1059 01:13:17,720 --> 01:13:22,280 Speaker 1: you have reaped the whirlwind, you will reap the whirlwind, 1060 01:13:22,880 --> 01:13:25,840 Speaker 1: he said, if you continue with these terrible decisions. What 1061 01:13:26,439 --> 01:13:29,880 Speaker 1: does that mean? If not, you will face the wrath 1062 01:13:30,080 --> 01:13:34,920 Speaker 1: of the increasingly unhinged left wing populace. You're listening to 1063 01:13:34,960 --> 01:13:44,920 Speaker 1: the Dan o'donald's show. More in just a second or 1064 01:13:45,160 --> 01:13:48,000 Speaker 1: five o'clock that means it is timed out to name 1065 01:13:48,439 --> 01:14:01,720 Speaker 1: today's unsung hero of the down. It is ten year 1066 01:14:01,720 --> 01:14:06,800 Speaker 1: old Liam, who organized a run in honor of the 1067 01:14:06,840 --> 01:14:11,160 Speaker 1: memory of Milwaukee police officer Kendall Quarter, who was shot 1068 01:14:11,200 --> 01:14:13,599 Speaker 1: and killed in the line of duty back in June. 1069 01:14:13,640 --> 01:14:18,320 Speaker 1: The story comes to us from today's TMJ four. Liam 1070 01:14:18,520 --> 01:14:23,160 Speaker 1: understandably his mom did not want his last name used, 1071 01:14:23,320 --> 01:14:28,120 Speaker 1: and Liam organized this run through Running four Heroes, a 1072 01:14:28,160 --> 01:14:31,960 Speaker 1: nonprofit that honors fallen first responders by keeping their names 1073 01:14:32,040 --> 01:14:36,679 Speaker 1: in motion one mile at a time. And they ran 1074 01:14:37,240 --> 01:14:41,000 Speaker 1: on the very field in Cutahey where Quarter once played 1075 01:14:41,160 --> 01:14:47,719 Speaker 1: football under Friday night lights, and Liam, who is from Chicago, said, 1076 01:14:47,800 --> 01:14:50,679 Speaker 1: it's unfair how these first responders are trying to help 1077 01:14:50,800 --> 01:14:54,840 Speaker 1: us and they get killed. Colleen, Liam's mom said, he 1078 01:14:54,920 --> 01:14:57,040 Speaker 1: volunteers his time to come out and run a mile 1079 01:14:57,439 --> 01:15:00,960 Speaker 1: in honor of our fallen first responder. I hope we 1080 01:15:01,000 --> 01:15:03,000 Speaker 1: don't have to do any of these, but we are 1081 01:15:03,040 --> 01:15:06,479 Speaker 1: ready when needed. It's an honor to honor those who 1082 01:15:06,479 --> 01:15:12,759 Speaker 1: have given the ultimate sacrifice. A longtime friend of officer Quarters, 1083 01:15:12,800 --> 01:15:15,680 Speaker 1: who also ran, as did a number of friends and 1084 01:15:15,840 --> 01:15:20,439 Speaker 1: family members, nilsa Arce, said I met him when he 1085 01:15:20,479 --> 01:15:23,040 Speaker 1: played football here. It hurts because the reason we're here 1086 01:15:23,520 --> 01:15:26,519 Speaker 1: it's he's not. I always use the word bittersweet because 1087 01:15:26,560 --> 01:15:29,599 Speaker 1: I don't think there's anything else to explain how it 1088 01:15:29,680 --> 01:15:32,800 Speaker 1: is we all feel now. After four laps around the track, 1089 01:15:33,200 --> 01:15:36,599 Speaker 1: Liam carried a flag across the finish line, a symbol 1090 01:15:36,600 --> 01:15:41,759 Speaker 1: of remembrance that will be presented to Quarter's family. Liam 1091 01:15:42,120 --> 01:15:45,000 Speaker 1: said of his run, I hope we get more kids 1092 01:15:45,000 --> 01:15:48,800 Speaker 1: to help with this will be there if we need to. 1093 01:15:49,040 --> 01:15:52,880 Speaker 1: What an incredible kid. A Quarter, of course, was shot 1094 01:15:52,880 --> 01:15:55,200 Speaker 1: and killed. He was thirty two years old. He died 1095 01:15:55,280 --> 01:15:58,160 Speaker 1: June twenty ninth. He was ambush while responding to a 1096 01:15:58,200 --> 01:16:01,640 Speaker 1: shots fired call near twenty five and Garfield. It was 1097 01:16:01,720 --> 01:16:06,880 Speaker 1: just an incredible, tragic, incredibly tragic officer involved shooting. But 1098 01:16:07,120 --> 01:16:11,599 Speaker 1: what an incredible kid. Ten year old Liam is your 1099 01:16:12,080 --> 01:16:16,440 Speaker 1: unsung hero of the day, and folks, as a reminder, 1100 01:16:16,439 --> 01:16:19,720 Speaker 1: we are always on the lookout for unsung heroes of 1101 01:16:19,760 --> 01:16:23,360 Speaker 1: the day. Whether it's a little boy organizing a memory 1102 01:16:23,520 --> 01:16:26,719 Speaker 1: mile for a fallen officer, or whether it's a teacher 1103 01:16:26,720 --> 01:16:29,479 Speaker 1: who just goes the extra mile to help out his 1104 01:16:29,720 --> 01:16:33,559 Speaker 1: or her students. We want to recognize them by naming 1105 01:16:33,640 --> 01:16:37,439 Speaker 1: them our unsung Hero of the Day. All you need 1106 01:16:37,479 --> 01:16:40,519 Speaker 1: to do to nominate somebody is shoot me an email 1107 01:16:40,760 --> 01:16:46,080 Speaker 1: d od at iHeartMedia dot com. Dan o'donald's show will 1108 01:16:46,080 --> 01:16:50,719 Speaker 1: be right back final hour here on the Dan o'donald Show. 1109 01:16:50,800 --> 01:16:52,920 Speaker 1: Welcome back, sue it. If you would like to join 1110 01:16:52,960 --> 01:16:56,400 Speaker 1: the program for one, four, seven, nine, nine, eleven thirty 1111 01:16:56,560 --> 01:16:59,240 Speaker 1: on our adventnows dot com talk and text line, email 1112 01:16:59,320 --> 01:17:02,360 Speaker 1: me d od at iHeartMedia dot com. Follow me on 1113 01:17:02,400 --> 01:17:05,680 Speaker 1: social at Dan o'donald Show on X on Facebook, on Instagram. 1114 01:17:05,720 --> 01:17:09,360 Speaker 1: Please do subscribe to the Dan o'donald Show podcast on 1115 01:17:09,479 --> 01:17:15,719 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio or wherever you listen to podcasts. We had, as 1116 01:17:15,760 --> 01:17:19,519 Speaker 1: I've been saying all afternoon, a red hot day in 1117 01:17:19,640 --> 01:17:24,040 Speaker 1: the Fall Fortune Cash contest. On Friday. We had not one, 1118 01:17:24,560 --> 01:17:28,799 Speaker 1: but two different winners on the Dan o'donald Show. First 1119 01:17:28,960 --> 01:17:33,400 Speaker 1: James from Milwaukee listening at three o'clock and then Nathan 1120 01:17:33,520 --> 01:17:39,160 Speaker 1: from Germantown listening at five. Both of those guys got 1121 01:17:39,200 --> 01:17:42,519 Speaker 1: the thousand dollars grand prize, and in fact that is 1122 01:17:42,600 --> 01:17:45,280 Speaker 1: they are the second and third winners because while they 1123 01:17:45,280 --> 01:17:49,479 Speaker 1: were listening on WYSN Radio, our great flagship. We also 1124 01:17:49,720 --> 01:17:52,640 Speaker 1: had a winner earlier in the week listening on our 1125 01:17:52,640 --> 01:17:58,520 Speaker 1: great affiliate thirteen to ten WYBA in Madison. So congratulations, everybody. 1126 01:17:58,640 --> 01:18:02,320 Speaker 1: Let's get another win right now. How about it? Nationwide 1127 01:18:02,400 --> 01:18:06,479 Speaker 1: keyword in the Fall Fortune Cash Contest this hour is 1128 01:18:06,720 --> 01:18:10,600 Speaker 1: appropriately enough cash C A S H. Cash. You have 1129 01:18:10,680 --> 01:18:13,320 Speaker 1: got until fifty five past this hour to go to 1130 01:18:13,360 --> 01:18:15,760 Speaker 1: our website and you saw have eleven thirty dot com 1131 01:18:16,000 --> 01:18:21,160 Speaker 1: or WIBA dot com enter the word cash. If your 1132 01:18:21,320 --> 01:18:24,400 Speaker 1: entry is picked at random, you will be the next 1133 01:18:24,439 --> 01:18:29,000 Speaker 1: winner generated by the Dan O'Donnell Show. Also long we 1134 01:18:29,120 --> 01:18:33,560 Speaker 1: have been talking about this poll that was released yesterday 1135 01:18:33,680 --> 01:18:37,879 Speaker 1: that sort of confirms what I've been kind of saying 1136 01:18:38,360 --> 01:18:42,400 Speaker 1: about these statewide races that at this point in an 1137 01:18:42,439 --> 01:18:45,040 Speaker 1: election cycle, there really isn't a whole heck of a 1138 01:18:45,040 --> 01:18:51,200 Speaker 1: lot of name recognition outside of Congressman Tom Tiffany, who 1139 01:18:51,240 --> 01:18:55,480 Speaker 1: has a commanding lead on the Republican side. The reality 1140 01:18:55,720 --> 01:18:59,599 Speaker 1: is that none of the declared candidates are really all 1141 01:18:59,720 --> 01:19:03,200 Speaker 1: that well known. This is why you saw a man, 1142 01:19:03,240 --> 01:19:08,240 Speaker 1: deadbeat Barnes the favorite amongst Democrats. It's because he was 1143 01:19:08,320 --> 01:19:12,559 Speaker 1: the last statewide candidate that is a non incoment obviously, 1144 01:19:12,640 --> 01:19:16,040 Speaker 1: the last statewide candidate that they ran was Senator Tammy Baldwin. 1145 01:19:16,120 --> 01:19:18,160 Speaker 1: She is clearly not going to be running for governor, 1146 01:19:18,479 --> 01:19:23,960 Speaker 1: and as I reported exclusively earlier in The show Man Deadbeat, 1147 01:19:24,200 --> 01:19:29,559 Speaker 1: is now very very strongly considering running for governor in 1148 01:19:29,640 --> 01:19:33,920 Speaker 1: twenty twenty six, sort of regardless of what Attorney General 1149 01:19:34,080 --> 01:19:36,640 Speaker 1: Call is going to do, because Call is sort of 1150 01:19:36,640 --> 01:19:39,400 Speaker 1: taking his sweet time deciding on whether or not to 1151 01:19:39,479 --> 01:19:43,559 Speaker 1: get in. As I reported exclusively last week, he has 1152 01:19:43,640 --> 01:19:46,639 Speaker 1: been meeting with donors and if the money is there, 1153 01:19:46,760 --> 01:19:49,559 Speaker 1: if he can go in with a substantial war chest, 1154 01:19:49,880 --> 01:19:52,439 Speaker 1: he's going to get in. If he can't get the 1155 01:19:52,479 --> 01:19:55,639 Speaker 1: donors behind him, if he can't all but clear the 1156 01:19:55,640 --> 01:19:58,559 Speaker 1: field because of the name recognition and because of the 1157 01:19:58,560 --> 01:20:02,680 Speaker 1: financial advantage, then he would be content to run for 1158 01:20:02,880 --> 01:20:07,679 Speaker 1: attorney general again. Before we even get to the governor's race, 1159 01:20:07,720 --> 01:20:10,960 Speaker 1: of course, we have a Supreme Court race. Last week, 1160 01:20:11,400 --> 01:20:14,320 Speaker 1: Appellate Court Judge Maria Lazarre, great friend of the program, 1161 01:20:14,360 --> 01:20:17,559 Speaker 1: great conservative, announced that she is going to get in. 1162 01:20:17,960 --> 01:20:21,840 Speaker 1: Chris Taylor, another Appellate Court judge, a Madison judge, long 1163 01:20:22,000 --> 01:20:29,200 Speaker 1: time Democrat state legislator, hardcore partisan liberal, announced five months 1164 01:20:29,200 --> 01:20:31,240 Speaker 1: ago that she's in. Of course, this is the seat 1165 01:20:31,240 --> 01:20:35,400 Speaker 1: being vacated by conservative Justice Rebecca Bradley, who announced just 1166 01:20:35,479 --> 01:20:38,120 Speaker 1: before a Labor Day weekend that she was not going 1167 01:20:38,160 --> 01:20:42,160 Speaker 1: to seek another ten year term. Joining us now to 1168 01:20:42,320 --> 01:20:46,640 Speaker 1: talk about all of this everything going on in Wisconsin 1169 01:20:46,720 --> 01:20:50,120 Speaker 1: politics and more is another great friend of the show, 1170 01:20:50,360 --> 01:20:54,639 Speaker 1: former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. Scott always great to talk 1171 01:20:54,680 --> 01:20:56,920 Speaker 1: to you. Thank you so much for making yourself available. 1172 01:20:57,240 --> 01:20:58,840 Speaker 2: Hey, my pleasure. Always good to be too. 1173 01:20:59,360 --> 01:21:02,200 Speaker 1: So let's start with the Supreme Court race. You've got 1174 01:21:02,200 --> 01:21:06,280 Speaker 1: a great conservative in Maria Lazarre, and you've got a 1175 01:21:06,840 --> 01:21:14,080 Speaker 1: hardcore partisan Democrat, liberal progressive Democrat in Chris Taylor. How 1176 01:21:14,120 --> 01:21:18,960 Speaker 1: does Lazarre get her message out there knowing that there's 1177 01:21:19,000 --> 01:21:21,519 Speaker 1: going to be a whole lot of outside money flooding 1178 01:21:21,640 --> 01:21:25,400 Speaker 1: into this race to sort of cover for Chris Taylor's record. 1179 01:21:26,800 --> 01:21:30,479 Speaker 2: Yeah. Now, it's the three ms message, manpower, and money, 1180 01:21:30,600 --> 01:21:32,559 Speaker 2: and you've got to have all three. You're going to 1181 01:21:32,560 --> 01:21:34,080 Speaker 2: have to have the most, but you have enough to 1182 01:21:34,080 --> 01:21:36,639 Speaker 2: at least get your message out. So I think she's 1183 01:21:36,720 --> 01:21:40,479 Speaker 2: got to begin and end and everywhere between, keep reinforcing that. 1184 01:21:41,120 --> 01:21:43,240 Speaker 2: You know, if you live in Wisconsin like we do, 1185 01:21:43,280 --> 01:21:46,440 Speaker 2: and you want to have a judge versus a politician, 1186 01:21:46,600 --> 01:21:49,880 Speaker 2: and a very liberal one for Madison at that that's 1187 01:21:49,880 --> 01:21:52,519 Speaker 2: what this race is all about, you know we I 1188 01:21:52,560 --> 01:21:55,559 Speaker 2: think not only she talk about her experience, which is fine, 1189 01:21:55,640 --> 01:21:57,840 Speaker 2: she kicked it off that way, but I think as 1190 01:21:57,840 --> 01:22:00,679 Speaker 2: we go along, she's going to have to get very 1191 01:22:00,800 --> 01:22:05,200 Speaker 2: very specific examples of where Taylor is going to, you know, 1192 01:22:05,360 --> 01:22:07,519 Speaker 2: literally hide behind a cloak trying to say I'm just 1193 01:22:07,560 --> 01:22:10,439 Speaker 2: a judge. Yeah, she was appointed by Tony Evers, but 1194 01:22:10,720 --> 01:22:13,360 Speaker 2: really point out this isn't just someone who is a 1195 01:22:13,360 --> 01:22:18,320 Speaker 2: politician who was an elected official, unlike Blazarre, who's only 1196 01:22:18,360 --> 01:22:21,160 Speaker 2: been a judge. That's all she's done. She wasn't appointed 1197 01:22:21,160 --> 01:22:23,760 Speaker 2: by anybody. She was elected by the people, Circuit Court, 1198 01:22:23,760 --> 01:22:27,200 Speaker 2: Court of Appeals. But more important than that, she's gonna 1199 01:22:27,200 --> 01:22:29,559 Speaker 2: have to point out some of the really radical things 1200 01:22:29,560 --> 01:22:33,120 Speaker 2: that Taylor, even from Madison standings, has said and done 1201 01:22:33,120 --> 01:22:34,920 Speaker 2: over the years. And that to me is how you 1202 01:22:34,960 --> 01:22:38,320 Speaker 2: get the money and the message and the manpower going. 1203 01:22:38,320 --> 01:22:40,200 Speaker 2: Because people say, I don't want that, that's crazy. I 1204 01:22:40,240 --> 01:22:41,640 Speaker 2: don't want that from a judge. I don't want that 1205 01:22:41,640 --> 01:22:44,599 Speaker 2: from an elect official. Anywhere, but particularly not a judge. 1206 01:22:44,800 --> 01:22:47,000 Speaker 1: You know what's kind of interesting, though, is that in 1207 01:22:47,040 --> 01:22:51,960 Speaker 1: the last three judicial elections, all three of the left 1208 01:22:52,120 --> 01:22:58,599 Speaker 1: candidates didn't run away from being a progressive, far left radical. 1209 01:22:58,640 --> 01:23:03,360 Speaker 1: In fact, they leaned into Jill Kurowski, especially Janet Protoswitz 1210 01:23:03,400 --> 01:23:06,439 Speaker 1: in twenty twenty three, who is openly telling people how 1211 01:23:06,479 --> 01:23:09,320 Speaker 1: she was going to rule on significant cases that were 1212 01:23:09,400 --> 01:23:12,680 Speaker 1: likely to come before the Core. And then Susan Crawford, 1213 01:23:12,720 --> 01:23:16,080 Speaker 1: who was a bit more discreet about it but still 1214 01:23:16,200 --> 01:23:18,559 Speaker 1: made no bones about the fact that she was a 1215 01:23:18,800 --> 01:23:22,679 Speaker 1: Madison Liberal. Is it possible in all three of those 1216 01:23:22,720 --> 01:23:27,040 Speaker 1: candidates won by double digits. Is it possible that the 1217 01:23:27,240 --> 01:23:32,439 Speaker 1: electorate wants radical left wing politicians, or at least the 1218 01:23:32,520 --> 01:23:35,400 Speaker 1: voter base that is turning out in these spring elections 1219 01:23:35,720 --> 01:23:39,519 Speaker 1: for Democrat aligned candidates, that they overwhelmingly want that. 1220 01:23:41,360 --> 01:23:43,560 Speaker 2: I don't think it does. Certainly hope they don't, but 1221 01:23:44,080 --> 01:23:46,479 Speaker 2: I also don't believe that they do. I think you know, 1222 01:23:46,560 --> 01:23:48,679 Speaker 2: you and I and your listeners, the people that talk 1223 01:23:48,760 --> 01:23:51,480 Speaker 2: about this day in and day out, we know the details. 1224 01:23:51,840 --> 01:23:54,080 Speaker 2: What the benefit that each of those candidates said is 1225 01:23:54,400 --> 01:23:56,720 Speaker 2: they appealed to a donor base, not just on what 1226 01:23:56,760 --> 01:24:00,360 Speaker 2: they said, but particularly because the last several side, because 1227 01:24:00,400 --> 01:24:04,560 Speaker 2: it's been you know, to the Reed Hoffmann from California 1228 01:24:04,640 --> 01:24:07,760 Speaker 2: to the J. D. Pritzker from Illinois to the George Sorows. 1229 01:24:08,200 --> 01:24:10,880 Speaker 2: They just care about anything to stop Trump, anything to 1230 01:24:10,880 --> 01:24:16,000 Speaker 2: stop Trump, anything to stop Trump. And so just that 1231 01:24:16,000 --> 01:24:19,280 Speaker 2: that position alone, along with a strong party on the 1232 01:24:19,280 --> 01:24:24,200 Speaker 2: Democrat side, is raised literally millions of dollars to the 1233 01:24:24,240 --> 01:24:27,400 Speaker 2: state party that's been in the funneled out there. Those 1234 01:24:27,439 --> 01:24:28,880 Speaker 2: of us in the right got to figure out better 1235 01:24:28,880 --> 01:24:31,679 Speaker 2: ways to match that. But I also think in terms 1236 01:24:31,720 --> 01:24:37,439 Speaker 2: of rallying the base, it's not necessarily saying I'm going 1237 01:24:37,520 --> 01:24:40,759 Speaker 2: to rule this way, but rather in each of those cases, 1238 01:24:40,800 --> 01:24:43,640 Speaker 2: the things they talked about. For example, abortion is a 1239 01:24:43,680 --> 01:24:46,280 Speaker 2: non issue anymore to me after the Supreme Court ruling 1240 01:24:46,640 --> 01:24:48,360 Speaker 2: it is. You know, it was only a matter of 1241 01:24:48,360 --> 01:24:50,040 Speaker 2: did they go with the original law or the law 1242 01:24:50,400 --> 01:24:54,000 Speaker 2: Eystein that protects an or baby halfway through a pregnancy. 1243 01:24:54,040 --> 01:24:58,280 Speaker 2: I think overwhelmingly voters agree that that's a good law. 1244 01:24:59,000 --> 01:25:01,719 Speaker 2: They can't hide, and that they can't say that that's 1245 01:25:01,920 --> 01:25:04,880 Speaker 2: suddenly going to be taken away. You know. Redistricting is 1246 01:25:04,920 --> 01:25:07,320 Speaker 2: something that most voters don't care much one way or 1247 01:25:07,320 --> 01:25:09,760 Speaker 2: another about What they do care about is crime. They 1248 01:25:09,800 --> 01:25:13,960 Speaker 2: care about criminals who've come in to this country illegally 1249 01:25:14,000 --> 01:25:17,240 Speaker 2: committing more crimes. They care about law and order issues, 1250 01:25:17,720 --> 01:25:20,160 Speaker 2: and that's where I think they've got to just really 1251 01:25:20,320 --> 01:25:23,439 Speaker 2: nail Taylor with just how out of touch she's been 1252 01:25:23,479 --> 01:25:27,200 Speaker 2: again from Madison State on those issues. Yeah, it becomes 1253 01:25:27,200 --> 01:25:30,559 Speaker 2: an issue specific campaign, but not necessarily by the lazaar 1254 01:25:30,960 --> 01:25:34,639 Speaker 2: saying here's I'm going to rule, but rather saying this woman, 1255 01:25:34,840 --> 01:25:37,799 Speaker 2: Taylor's already got a track record. We know where she stands, 1256 01:25:38,040 --> 01:25:40,519 Speaker 2: and it's completely out of touch with every day with 1257 01:25:40,560 --> 01:25:41,639 Speaker 2: Stevens and I's so. 1258 01:25:41,560 --> 01:25:43,880 Speaker 1: You're saying she really needs to take the fight to 1259 01:25:43,920 --> 01:25:47,160 Speaker 1: her immediately. In fact, when she got in I was 1260 01:25:47,680 --> 01:25:53,200 Speaker 1: really sort of banging the drum that look just introducing 1261 01:25:53,240 --> 01:25:57,240 Speaker 1: yourself and saying, you know, I'm the judge, she's the politician. 1262 01:25:57,280 --> 01:26:00,440 Speaker 1: Which is great messaging, and that actually is effective messaging, 1263 01:26:00,840 --> 01:26:04,479 Speaker 1: but you have to step by step show people, Okay, 1264 01:26:04,520 --> 01:26:09,799 Speaker 1: here is the planned parenthood activism. The Democrat politician ties 1265 01:26:10,040 --> 01:26:12,000 Speaker 1: all of the out of state money from the reid 1266 01:26:12,080 --> 01:26:15,679 Speaker 1: Hoffmans and George Soros's and JB Pritzkers of the world. 1267 01:26:16,320 --> 01:26:18,799 Speaker 1: She needs to, it seems to me go on offense 1268 01:26:18,840 --> 01:26:19,880 Speaker 1: almost immediately. 1269 01:26:20,880 --> 01:26:23,160 Speaker 2: I think you're right. Well, good example that years ago 1270 01:26:23,240 --> 01:26:27,439 Speaker 2: when Iran for county executive, obviously in a race that nobody, 1271 01:26:27,520 --> 01:26:29,880 Speaker 2: none of the pundits thought we could ever win. One 1272 01:26:29,920 --> 01:26:31,840 Speaker 2: of the things we did after we came out of 1273 01:26:31,840 --> 01:26:34,800 Speaker 2: the primary ahead was Iran an ad walking down the 1274 01:26:34,800 --> 01:26:38,599 Speaker 2: street just saying, here's what's coming next. Because we were 1275 01:26:38,760 --> 01:26:41,320 Speaker 2: we listened to you, because we don't listen to the establishment, 1276 01:26:41,360 --> 01:26:43,519 Speaker 2: because we're not part of the problem. They're going to 1277 01:26:43,600 --> 01:26:46,160 Speaker 2: run ads attacking me, doing this, this and this. We 1278 01:26:46,280 --> 01:26:48,559 Speaker 2: spelled it out, We clearly told them, so when those 1279 01:26:48,560 --> 01:26:51,760 Speaker 2: things happen, they knew. In this case, I think it's 1280 01:26:51,800 --> 01:26:53,800 Speaker 2: one of those where if they have enough money. We 1281 01:26:53,880 --> 01:26:56,640 Speaker 2: saw it with each of those other keyunits. They pretended 1282 01:26:56,640 --> 01:26:58,800 Speaker 2: to be tough in crime, they pretended to these things. 1283 01:26:59,120 --> 01:27:01,360 Speaker 2: Even though Taylor is even further to the left than 1284 01:27:01,360 --> 01:27:05,120 Speaker 2: any of them. She has enough money, she will transform 1285 01:27:05,120 --> 01:27:08,720 Speaker 2: herself into something that really doesn't match her records. And 1286 01:27:08,760 --> 01:27:11,519 Speaker 2: that's why it's incumbent to start saying it right away. 1287 01:27:11,720 --> 01:27:15,720 Speaker 1: Yeah, I think absolutely it is yaf President former Wisconsin 1288 01:27:15,800 --> 01:27:18,519 Speaker 1: Governor Scott Walker joining me here on the dan O'donald 1289 01:27:18,520 --> 01:27:22,679 Speaker 1: Shoede shift gears to the governor's race. Here is something 1290 01:27:22,680 --> 01:27:26,840 Speaker 1: that you obviously know very very well. And despite the 1291 01:27:26,840 --> 01:27:30,360 Speaker 1: fact that you put out that post with the forty 1292 01:27:30,360 --> 01:27:35,120 Speaker 1: five forty seventh hat leading to people think that was fun, 1293 01:27:35,160 --> 01:27:37,439 Speaker 1: because you would actually be the forty fifth and forty 1294 01:27:37,479 --> 01:27:40,679 Speaker 1: seventh Wisconsin governor, just as President Trump is the forty 1295 01:27:40,680 --> 01:27:44,120 Speaker 1: fifth and forty seventh president. There is a weird little 1296 01:27:44,120 --> 01:27:48,320 Speaker 1: bit of coincidence and symmetry there. You are not running, 1297 01:27:49,040 --> 01:27:52,000 Speaker 1: and we have a field that appears to be two. 1298 01:27:52,720 --> 01:27:57,959 Speaker 1: Congressman Tom Tiffany got in two weeks ago, and Washington 1299 01:27:57,960 --> 01:28:02,280 Speaker 1: County executive Josh Showman has been running, i believe since 1300 01:28:02,320 --> 01:28:07,000 Speaker 1: April or May. Bill Berrian, a Whitefish Bay businessman, dropped 1301 01:28:07,000 --> 01:28:10,439 Speaker 1: out amid a bit of a scandal, So it looks 1302 01:28:10,479 --> 01:28:12,960 Speaker 1: as though this is going to be a two horse race. Now. 1303 01:28:12,960 --> 01:28:16,360 Speaker 1: There was just a poll that was released on Sunday. 1304 01:28:16,400 --> 01:28:20,200 Speaker 1: I'm sure you saw it. It shows Tiffany with a 1305 01:28:20,400 --> 01:28:25,080 Speaker 1: commanding lead thirty percent, and then the next two candidates 1306 01:28:25,320 --> 01:28:31,120 Speaker 1: who are preferred by Republicans are Eric Hovedy and Tim Michaels, 1307 01:28:31,160 --> 01:28:36,599 Speaker 1: with Showman only garnering four percent. Is this terrible news 1308 01:28:36,680 --> 01:28:39,240 Speaker 1: for him or does this as I suspect and have 1309 01:28:39,320 --> 01:28:42,200 Speaker 1: said over and over on the show today, that this 1310 01:28:42,360 --> 01:28:45,759 Speaker 1: merely reflects the fact that there isn't high name ID 1311 01:28:46,640 --> 01:28:51,240 Speaker 1: and that we have a tendency in gubernatorial elections to 1312 01:28:51,520 --> 01:28:54,840 Speaker 1: just sort of have fond memories of the last couple 1313 01:28:54,840 --> 01:28:58,040 Speaker 1: of candidates, primarily because they're the ones we remember. 1314 01:28:58,080 --> 01:29:02,080 Speaker 2: And No, I think that's exactly it. It's name idea. 1315 01:29:02,120 --> 01:29:04,920 Speaker 2: It's why Mendela Barnes on the other side has got 1316 01:29:04,960 --> 01:29:08,280 Speaker 2: high name ID from that that Senate race. He would 1317 01:29:08,400 --> 01:29:11,519 Speaker 2: he'd be a godsend for a Conservatives. He was horrible. 1318 01:29:11,920 --> 01:29:13,880 Speaker 2: Uh but but I don't think they're going to make 1319 01:29:14,240 --> 01:29:16,880 Speaker 2: that mistake. They'll make a mistake, but it won't be 1320 01:29:17,000 --> 01:29:19,000 Speaker 2: that absurd a mistake on the other side. No, I 1321 01:29:19,040 --> 01:29:22,439 Speaker 2: think you're right. The reflection, the name idea awareness, you know, 1322 01:29:22,439 --> 01:29:24,800 Speaker 2: it still shows all along. I like Josh Shulman, I 1323 01:29:24,800 --> 01:29:27,679 Speaker 2: think is a good kind executive is number one issue 1324 01:29:27,720 --> 01:29:30,720 Speaker 2: is going to be name idea even in southeastern Wisconsin. 1325 01:29:31,240 --> 01:29:33,240 Speaker 2: Night In a difference between when I was kind of 1326 01:29:33,280 --> 01:29:36,760 Speaker 2: executive Milwaukee and was on TV literally almost every day 1327 01:29:36,840 --> 01:29:41,439 Speaker 2: versus any other surrounding areas. But but that'll have an 1328 01:29:41,439 --> 01:29:43,600 Speaker 2: impact even polls like this though, of an impact on 1329 01:29:43,680 --> 01:29:48,599 Speaker 2: fundraising and messaging. So right now it appears at least 1330 01:29:48,680 --> 01:29:51,840 Speaker 2: Tiffany's got a nice bump. Whether or not that stands, 1331 01:29:51,920 --> 01:29:53,720 Speaker 2: you know, there's as you said, there's a lot of 1332 01:29:53,760 --> 01:29:56,559 Speaker 2: time out there. People need to be creative about their messaging. 1333 01:29:56,640 --> 01:29:59,720 Speaker 2: They need to see what breaks through. What I think 1334 01:29:59,800 --> 01:30:04,720 Speaker 2: is particularly interesting is because it's an open race, it 1335 01:30:04,760 --> 01:30:07,160 Speaker 2: also shows there's not a clear front runner on the 1336 01:30:07,200 --> 01:30:10,720 Speaker 2: other side. And that's good because the cycle, as you know, Dan, 1337 01:30:11,280 --> 01:30:14,439 Speaker 2: the last thirty five years, every election but one, the 1338 01:30:14,520 --> 01:30:18,439 Speaker 2: person who wins is opposite the incumbent president, and so 1339 01:30:18,920 --> 01:30:22,200 Speaker 2: that's kind of the historical challenge we're up against. Evers 1340 01:30:22,240 --> 01:30:25,479 Speaker 2: getting out opens it up, makes it wide open, that 1341 01:30:25,520 --> 01:30:28,920 Speaker 2: makes it much much more winnable. And if they're going 1342 01:30:29,000 --> 01:30:32,599 Speaker 2: to have this circus of left wingers on the other side, 1343 01:30:32,680 --> 01:30:35,439 Speaker 2: none of which are clearly emerging, I think that's a 1344 01:30:35,439 --> 01:30:36,599 Speaker 2: good sign for next fall. 1345 01:30:36,880 --> 01:30:40,040 Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely, I do think it is. Who do you think, 1346 01:30:40,080 --> 01:30:43,280 Speaker 1: if you had to handicap it right now, who do 1347 01:30:43,320 --> 01:30:47,599 Speaker 1: you think ultimately emerges from that Democrat field. Keeping in 1348 01:30:47,640 --> 01:30:49,760 Speaker 1: mind that we still don't know if Josh Call is 1349 01:30:49,800 --> 01:30:50,599 Speaker 1: going to get in. 1350 01:30:51,960 --> 01:30:54,080 Speaker 2: Yeah, well, in that caveat, I was going to say, 1351 01:30:54,520 --> 01:30:57,559 Speaker 2: if Josh Call gets in, I still put my money 1352 01:30:57,560 --> 01:31:01,639 Speaker 2: behind an attorney general. I think name the bigger amount 1353 01:31:01,680 --> 01:31:04,280 Speaker 2: of cash on hand, bigger abillity nationally to raise money. 1354 01:31:04,400 --> 01:31:06,720 Speaker 2: But if he's not in, I think David Crawley, who 1355 01:31:06,720 --> 01:31:08,960 Speaker 2: I like, but who I think would have a huge 1356 01:31:09,040 --> 01:31:12,720 Speaker 2: liability going to the voter saying hey, I raised the 1357 01:31:12,800 --> 01:31:15,439 Speaker 2: sales tax in my county and city to the largest 1358 01:31:15,760 --> 01:31:17,880 Speaker 2: it's ever been in the state, and I still had 1359 01:31:17,880 --> 01:31:21,320 Speaker 2: to raise property taxes a year after the balance a 1360 01:31:21,360 --> 01:31:24,720 Speaker 2: budget deficit. That's not exactly a compelling message, no matter 1361 01:31:24,760 --> 01:31:26,960 Speaker 2: how nice he is. So I think it is a 1362 01:31:27,000 --> 01:31:30,200 Speaker 2: real challenge. But because not just because he's from Milwaukee 1363 01:31:30,880 --> 01:31:34,759 Speaker 2: in the Democrat brimery, but because you've got several crazy 1364 01:31:34,760 --> 01:31:37,400 Speaker 2: candidates on the left from Dane County, I think they 1365 01:31:37,439 --> 01:31:38,320 Speaker 2: split that vote up. 1366 01:31:39,040 --> 01:31:42,000 Speaker 1: He is Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, Sir, Can you stick 1367 01:31:42,040 --> 01:31:46,200 Speaker 1: around for one more brief segment? Sure, yep, absolutely, We're 1368 01:31:46,200 --> 01:31:48,160 Speaker 1: going to take a quick commercial break. When we come 1369 01:31:48,200 --> 01:31:52,280 Speaker 1: back more with Governor Walker, including some of the demographic 1370 01:31:52,479 --> 01:31:55,160 Speaker 1: challenges that I've been talking about on this show, is 1371 01:31:55,200 --> 01:31:59,080 Speaker 1: that might be a little difficult, There might be some 1372 01:31:59,240 --> 01:32:01,920 Speaker 1: headwinds into twenty twenty six. You're listening to the dan 1373 01:32:01,920 --> 01:32:06,200 Speaker 1: O'donnald Shelby right back in just a second, Resident of 1374 01:32:06,240 --> 01:32:10,120 Speaker 1: Young America's Foundation, Scott Walker, kind of breaking down where 1375 01:32:10,160 --> 01:32:12,920 Speaker 1: we are politically here in Wisconsin. 1376 01:32:12,960 --> 01:32:13,160 Speaker 2: Now. 1377 01:32:13,520 --> 01:32:17,000 Speaker 1: I've talked about this at length, and Scott, you and 1378 01:32:17,040 --> 01:32:19,760 Speaker 1: I talked about this when we were doing a little 1379 01:32:19,800 --> 01:32:24,280 Speaker 1: fireside chat for the Wisconsin Formed, great organization. We were 1380 01:32:24,320 --> 01:32:28,360 Speaker 1: there last Thursday out at the Ingles Side Hotel. Just 1381 01:32:28,640 --> 01:32:31,040 Speaker 1: a wonderful event, great conversation, but we were sort of 1382 01:32:31,080 --> 01:32:35,439 Speaker 1: talking about this there too, that when you were running 1383 01:32:35,760 --> 01:32:40,400 Speaker 1: and winning three elections in what four years, and one 1384 01:32:40,439 --> 01:32:43,720 Speaker 1: of them the highest profile recall election I think in 1385 01:32:43,800 --> 01:32:49,320 Speaker 1: American history, you had a very strong coalition of conservatives 1386 01:32:49,920 --> 01:32:53,880 Speaker 1: in the Wisconsin suburbs, in the Wow counties, Waka, sho Ozagi, 1387 01:32:54,120 --> 01:32:59,040 Speaker 1: and Washington. That has in the era of Trump over 1388 01:32:59,080 --> 01:33:03,280 Speaker 1: the last decade, mad somewhat evaporated and we are now 1389 01:33:03,400 --> 01:33:08,720 Speaker 1: much more dependent on lower propensity voters in rural areas 1390 01:33:09,360 --> 01:33:12,040 Speaker 1: as well, as we're getting new voters in black and 1391 01:33:12,200 --> 01:33:16,040 Speaker 1: Hispanic communities, which is awesome. But it used to be 1392 01:33:16,240 --> 01:33:19,719 Speaker 1: that Republicans did very very well in gubernatorial elections supreme 1393 01:33:19,760 --> 01:33:22,920 Speaker 1: court elections because our people would show up in every 1394 01:33:23,000 --> 01:33:27,719 Speaker 1: single election regardless, and Democrats would only get the people 1395 01:33:27,760 --> 01:33:30,519 Speaker 1: who would vote in presidential elections, So they did very 1396 01:33:30,520 --> 01:33:34,240 Speaker 1: well there. That seems to have flipped, and I am 1397 01:33:34,360 --> 01:33:37,599 Speaker 1: convinced a big reason for it is that the so 1398 01:33:37,720 --> 01:33:43,400 Speaker 1: called Scott Walker Coalition is not just retiring and going 1399 01:33:43,439 --> 01:33:46,000 Speaker 1: down to Florida to be snowbirds because of the weather, 1400 01:33:46,160 --> 01:33:50,080 Speaker 1: Arizona or wherever, but because there's no state income tax 1401 01:33:50,200 --> 01:33:54,000 Speaker 1: in Florida, they're actually just like my mother, becoming Florida 1402 01:33:54,160 --> 01:33:58,519 Speaker 1: residence and voting in Florida, turning Florida much much redder, 1403 01:33:58,960 --> 01:34:01,760 Speaker 1: but leaving Wisconsin in a little bit. Bluer, I want 1404 01:34:01,800 --> 01:34:04,120 Speaker 1: your take on that. Am I off base or is 1405 01:34:04,160 --> 01:34:05,479 Speaker 1: that kind of what's happening here? 1406 01:34:06,520 --> 01:34:08,960 Speaker 2: No? I think that. I think that's a significant portion 1407 01:34:09,080 --> 01:34:12,160 Speaker 2: of that. It's the not only the weather climate, but 1408 01:34:12,200 --> 01:34:15,040 Speaker 2: the tax climate for sure. I think the add to that. 1409 01:34:15,120 --> 01:34:21,160 Speaker 2: In the post COVID world, so many national corporations have 1410 01:34:21,280 --> 01:34:24,000 Speaker 2: changed the policy allow people to work remotely. So then 1411 01:34:24,040 --> 01:34:27,760 Speaker 2: it's exacerbated not only by people retiring becoming residents of 1412 01:34:27,800 --> 01:34:31,679 Speaker 2: another state, particularly Florida, Texas others didn't have an income text, 1413 01:34:31,760 --> 01:34:36,000 Speaker 2: but exacerbated by young people who come, particularly to places 1414 01:34:36,040 --> 01:34:39,840 Speaker 2: like the University of ssconsin Madison, who would otherwise graduate 1415 01:34:40,040 --> 01:34:47,840 Speaker 2: and go to San Francisco, LA, New York, Washington, d C. 1416 01:34:48,439 --> 01:34:50,720 Speaker 2: Instead saying, oh, I can work remotely, I'm going to 1417 01:34:50,760 --> 01:34:54,519 Speaker 2: stay in this wonderful mediicin area that they love. And 1418 01:34:54,840 --> 01:34:58,120 Speaker 2: so you see the numbers, they're really skyrocketing in the 1419 01:34:58,200 --> 01:35:01,840 Speaker 2: last five years. County was Now you know, it's not 1420 01:35:01,880 --> 01:35:04,479 Speaker 2: just Democrats you and I talked about. You had a 1421 01:35:04,520 --> 01:35:08,800 Speaker 2: Supreme Court race where you had a substantially larger number 1422 01:35:08,800 --> 01:35:12,559 Speaker 2: of actual votes cast in Dane County than Milwaukee County, 1423 01:35:12,600 --> 01:35:14,880 Speaker 2: even though it's the smaller the counties, and like eighty 1424 01:35:14,880 --> 01:35:17,240 Speaker 2: two percent of those votes went for the you know, 1425 01:35:17,280 --> 01:35:20,000 Speaker 2: the radical liberal candidates. So it's a kind of it's 1426 01:35:20,040 --> 01:35:23,479 Speaker 2: part of the reason. Honestly, why you know, when people said, oh, 1427 01:35:23,520 --> 01:35:26,840 Speaker 2: you should run be forty seven, why never say never. 1428 01:35:27,040 --> 01:35:29,400 Speaker 2: I'm a quarter century younger than Joe Biden's that time 1429 01:35:29,479 --> 01:35:32,440 Speaker 2: but but why literally why this year I've still focused 1430 01:35:33,200 --> 01:35:36,720 Speaker 2: for now at Young America's Foundation is because with with 1431 01:35:36,880 --> 01:35:39,719 Speaker 2: yeaff with Turning Point, with Kyllge Republicans, with other groups 1432 01:35:39,760 --> 01:35:43,799 Speaker 2: like that, we have to be engaged sooner because we're 1433 01:35:43,840 --> 01:35:45,519 Speaker 2: you know, the last couple of seconds, we were getting 1434 01:35:45,560 --> 01:35:48,400 Speaker 2: clobbered by younger voters and they're not you know, this 1435 01:35:48,520 --> 01:35:51,679 Speaker 2: whole adage, oh, grow up, pay taxes, move on, that's 1436 01:35:51,720 --> 01:35:53,920 Speaker 2: not what that's not what is happening in the suburbs. 1437 01:35:54,160 --> 01:35:56,920 Speaker 2: And so we've got to get to them younger, uh, 1438 01:35:57,160 --> 01:35:59,960 Speaker 2: not just for twenty six, but for twenty eight thirty MBA. 1439 01:36:00,680 --> 01:36:04,080 Speaker 1: At the same time, though, it seems as though younger 1440 01:36:04,240 --> 01:36:08,920 Speaker 1: men thirty and under are more conservative now than they 1441 01:36:08,920 --> 01:36:11,919 Speaker 1: ever have been. Obviously with your work with Young America's Foundation, 1442 01:36:12,080 --> 01:36:15,240 Speaker 1: you see that. And then after the just tragic and 1443 01:36:15,360 --> 01:36:20,400 Speaker 1: devastating assassination of Charlie Kirk, where there have been applications 1444 01:36:20,400 --> 01:36:23,680 Speaker 1: for new Turning Point chapters just by the thousands and 1445 01:36:23,800 --> 01:36:27,839 Speaker 1: high schools and colleges, it seems as though we really 1446 01:36:28,000 --> 01:36:36,080 Speaker 1: have an opportunity here to set lifetime voting patterns. Right 1447 01:36:36,160 --> 01:36:39,200 Speaker 1: now based on the moment that we're in, are you 1448 01:36:39,439 --> 01:36:44,639 Speaker 1: seeing that increased focus. I mean, obviously everybody's devastated about 1449 01:36:44,720 --> 01:36:49,760 Speaker 1: Charlie's assassination. I know you knew him well, and now 1450 01:36:49,800 --> 01:36:54,080 Speaker 1: it seems there's sort of a redoubling of the efforts. 1451 01:36:54,080 --> 01:36:58,080 Speaker 1: In fact, just last week I was reporting on a 1452 01:36:58,080 --> 01:37:03,880 Speaker 1: couple of Wisconsin Concordia University and now MSOE chapters of 1453 01:37:04,000 --> 01:37:06,840 Speaker 1: turning Point where the school was kind of throwing off roadblocks, 1454 01:37:06,840 --> 01:37:10,320 Speaker 1: and at least in Concordia's case, the story went viral 1455 01:37:10,400 --> 01:37:12,519 Speaker 1: on social media. They relented there will be a turning 1456 01:37:12,520 --> 01:37:16,600 Speaker 1: Point chapter. But are you seeing the possibility of just 1457 01:37:16,760 --> 01:37:22,040 Speaker 1: an entire generation of young conservative men upsetting that traditional 1458 01:37:22,200 --> 01:37:26,320 Speaker 1: apple cart of young people just overwhelmingly going for Democrats. 1459 01:37:27,040 --> 01:37:31,559 Speaker 2: We certainly saw it last year. You know, the difference 1460 01:37:31,640 --> 01:37:35,200 Speaker 2: between young men eighteen to twenty nine in twenty twenty 1461 01:37:35,200 --> 01:37:39,439 Speaker 2: and twenty four was almost thirty points difference. In twenty twenty, 1462 01:37:40,000 --> 01:37:44,360 Speaker 2: young men went for Biden over Trump by about fifteen points. 1463 01:37:44,960 --> 01:37:47,920 Speaker 2: Four years later they went with Trump over Harris by 1464 01:37:47,960 --> 01:37:52,880 Speaker 2: about fourteen points. So that is a remarkable nearly thirty 1465 01:37:52,920 --> 01:37:56,200 Speaker 2: point shift, And I think it's the reflection of all 1466 01:37:56,240 --> 01:37:59,840 Speaker 2: the different groups you mentioned. Certainly Young America's Foundation, Charlie Group, others, 1467 01:38:00,200 --> 01:38:03,360 Speaker 2: you've been doing this, But it's also I think a 1468 01:38:03,400 --> 01:38:07,320 Speaker 2: reaction to the overdoing of the left so often we've 1469 01:38:07,320 --> 01:38:09,400 Speaker 2: seen that. We saw it in Wisconsin, the Rico and 1470 01:38:09,439 --> 01:38:13,160 Speaker 2: the left goes too far over people in the middle swing. 1471 01:38:13,400 --> 01:38:15,679 Speaker 2: In this case, it wasn't necessary the middle, but young 1472 01:38:15,720 --> 01:38:19,640 Speaker 2: men said, hey, I'm not the problem here. I'm not 1473 01:38:19,720 --> 01:38:23,000 Speaker 2: doing anything. I don't look at people based on race 1474 01:38:23,080 --> 01:38:26,200 Speaker 2: or sex or anything else. And they were tired of 1475 01:38:26,240 --> 01:38:28,880 Speaker 2: being the ones persecuted for this. So I think that 1476 01:38:29,280 --> 01:38:31,880 Speaker 2: there's a huge opportunity to build off of that. We 1477 01:38:31,920 --> 01:38:33,439 Speaker 2: just have to make sure it's not a moment in 1478 01:38:33,520 --> 01:38:37,719 Speaker 2: time last year when Trump beat Harris, I said, that's great, 1479 01:38:37,760 --> 01:38:40,200 Speaker 2: but we got we got to lock it in because 1480 01:38:40,280 --> 01:38:44,080 Speaker 2: if a more competent, more charismatic personality and the left 1481 01:38:44,080 --> 01:38:47,720 Speaker 2: comes along than Kamala Harris, we may still have some challenges. 1482 01:38:47,760 --> 01:38:50,760 Speaker 2: So the great shift, to your point, we got to 1483 01:38:50,800 --> 01:38:53,720 Speaker 2: lock it in now because the trends that people do 1484 01:38:53,760 --> 01:38:56,240 Speaker 2: by the time they're twenty five are likely the ones 1485 01:38:56,240 --> 01:38:57,679 Speaker 2: they stick with the rest of their lives. 1486 01:38:57,880 --> 01:39:00,800 Speaker 1: Do you think toward that end of seeing that that 1487 01:39:00,880 --> 01:39:05,160 Speaker 1: great explosion in young voters, especially young men for Trump 1488 01:39:05,640 --> 01:39:09,599 Speaker 1: was specific to Trump, because what I'm seeing in the 1489 01:39:09,640 --> 01:39:11,559 Speaker 1: era of Trump over the last ten years is we've 1490 01:39:11,600 --> 01:39:14,479 Speaker 1: got a lot of voters who are only Trump that 1491 01:39:14,640 --> 01:39:16,840 Speaker 1: they show up when Trump is on the ballot, but 1492 01:39:16,960 --> 01:39:18,360 Speaker 1: they don't when he's not. 1493 01:39:19,960 --> 01:39:22,599 Speaker 2: For sure. But I take it a step further. There's 1494 01:39:22,640 --> 01:39:25,400 Speaker 2: no doubt about it. There's that, But I also think 1495 01:39:25,439 --> 01:39:29,559 Speaker 2: the key to replicating the success that President Trump has 1496 01:39:29,560 --> 01:39:32,400 Speaker 2: had is not to be Trump or to be Trumpian 1497 01:39:32,439 --> 01:39:35,439 Speaker 2: is some might say, or trump like, meaning, don't you 1498 01:39:35,520 --> 01:39:37,439 Speaker 2: got to be who you are? Right at least with 1499 01:39:37,520 --> 01:39:40,680 Speaker 2: young people. We see in all our polling, authenticity is 1500 01:39:40,800 --> 01:39:44,160 Speaker 2: top of the list that Trump's every poor point, that 1501 01:39:44,280 --> 01:39:48,360 Speaker 2: pops everything. And so Trump one did not one but 1502 01:39:48,439 --> 01:39:51,320 Speaker 2: did better. One young man did better with young women 1503 01:39:51,720 --> 01:39:53,920 Speaker 2: because he was who he was. He was authentic, it 1504 01:39:54,000 --> 01:39:56,320 Speaker 2: was a real deal. They thought Harris rightfully so was 1505 01:39:56,360 --> 01:39:59,519 Speaker 2: a fraud. And so the recipe is not that if 1506 01:39:59,560 --> 01:40:02,400 Speaker 2: you're not, if that's not who you are, don't try 1507 01:40:02,439 --> 01:40:05,920 Speaker 2: to be Donald Trump. Be the boldest, most aggressive you are. 1508 01:40:06,040 --> 01:40:08,840 Speaker 2: You know who you are. And that's the lesson for 1509 01:40:08,880 --> 01:40:12,439 Speaker 2: anybody running in Wisconsin, anywhere in the country. Be yourself. 1510 01:40:13,120 --> 01:40:16,280 Speaker 2: I think people, you know, the things we did were 1511 01:40:16,280 --> 01:40:18,880 Speaker 2: as bold as Donald Trump, but our tone obviously is 1512 01:40:18,960 --> 01:40:21,839 Speaker 2: much much different because that's who I am. But people 1513 01:40:21,920 --> 01:40:24,400 Speaker 2: want bold leadership, but they want it in the way 1514 01:40:24,400 --> 01:40:25,720 Speaker 2: that reflects who the person is. 1515 01:40:25,760 --> 01:40:29,879 Speaker 1: And that's the lesson going for He is Wisconsin's great Governor, 1516 01:40:29,920 --> 01:40:32,400 Speaker 1: Scott Walker, as well as the great president of a 1517 01:40:32,520 --> 01:40:37,400 Speaker 1: truly special organization, the Young America's Foundation. Scott Walker, joining 1518 01:40:37,400 --> 01:40:39,320 Speaker 1: me here on the Dan o'donald Show. Sir, thank you 1519 01:40:39,360 --> 01:40:41,439 Speaker 1: so much for being so generous with your time. We'd 1520 01:40:41,439 --> 01:40:42,639 Speaker 1: love to have you back soon. 1521 01:40:43,760 --> 01:40:44,800 Speaker 2: My pleasure. Thanks man. 1522 01:40:45,040 --> 01:40:47,240 Speaker 1: All right, we are going to take a quick break. 1523 01:40:47,320 --> 01:40:49,240 Speaker 1: Be back in just a couple of minutes here on 1524 01:40:49,280 --> 01:40:59,960 Speaker 1: the Dan o'donald Show. And once again to Governor Walker 1525 01:41:00,160 --> 01:41:04,240 Speaker 1: for joining us to break down Wisconsin's political scene in 1526 01:41:04,320 --> 01:41:07,120 Speaker 1: terms of the Supreme Court race, the governor's race, where 1527 01:41:07,120 --> 01:41:10,280 Speaker 1: we are demographically, and much much more. Always do appreciate 1528 01:41:10,439 --> 01:41:13,200 Speaker 1: his insight. That pole we were talking about, we've sort 1529 01:41:13,240 --> 01:41:15,840 Speaker 1: of been talking about it all day. First poll in 1530 01:41:15,920 --> 01:41:20,120 Speaker 1: the primaries ahead of next year's gubernatorial race. It is 1531 01:41:20,160 --> 01:41:26,920 Speaker 1: a badger battle ground hole. This from Platform Communications over 1532 01:41:27,040 --> 01:41:31,639 Speaker 1: on the Republican side. Tom Tiffany, that congressman who announced 1533 01:41:31,680 --> 01:41:34,160 Speaker 1: on our show a couple of weeks ago, has the 1534 01:41:34,200 --> 01:41:40,080 Speaker 1: support of thirty percent of respondents. The next prospective candidate, 1535 01:41:40,160 --> 01:41:43,240 Speaker 1: and I say perspective because he is not in this 1536 01:41:43,400 --> 01:41:46,599 Speaker 1: race and has given no indication that he would be 1537 01:41:46,760 --> 01:41:49,919 Speaker 1: in this race, is Eric Hovedy. He gets fourteen percent. 1538 01:41:50,640 --> 01:41:55,640 Speaker 1: Thirty four percent of the Republican electorate are undecided. The 1539 01:41:55,680 --> 01:41:59,439 Speaker 1: poll also included the other named candidate in this race, 1540 01:41:59,600 --> 01:42:03,720 Speaker 1: Josh Showman, also prospective candidates Tim Michaels who ran for 1541 01:42:03,760 --> 01:42:08,280 Speaker 1: governor four years ago, Senator Mary Felskowski. Just more than 1542 01:42:08,680 --> 01:42:13,960 Speaker 1: ten percent of voters favored none of these, And it 1543 01:42:14,000 --> 01:42:17,439 Speaker 1: should be noted the poll was also conducted for before 1544 01:42:17,520 --> 01:42:21,240 Speaker 1: Tommy Thompson said he is considering a run, as he 1545 01:42:21,520 --> 01:42:24,240 Speaker 1: apparently just kind of always does. Now, just if there 1546 01:42:24,280 --> 01:42:27,759 Speaker 1: is a statewide race, Tommy will float his name. It's 1547 01:42:27,840 --> 01:42:31,000 Speaker 1: sort of like your sign of election season. Just as 1548 01:42:31,040 --> 01:42:34,439 Speaker 1: the geese flying south right now signals that fall is here, 1549 01:42:34,479 --> 01:42:37,599 Speaker 1: winter is on its way, election season has started. Because 1550 01:42:37,600 --> 01:42:40,599 Speaker 1: Tommy Thompson is saying that he is thinking about a run, 1551 01:42:40,800 --> 01:42:43,479 Speaker 1: and then inevitably we will get a couple of months 1552 01:42:43,479 --> 01:42:46,439 Speaker 1: from now, the news that Tommy's family talked him out 1553 01:42:46,439 --> 01:42:49,479 Speaker 1: of it. Over on the Democrat side, man deadbeat Barnes 1554 01:42:49,520 --> 01:42:54,360 Speaker 1: gets sixteen percent, and as I reported exclusively earlier in 1555 01:42:54,400 --> 01:42:57,280 Speaker 1: the show, this is looking more and more. I'm not 1556 01:42:57,320 --> 01:43:01,120 Speaker 1: going to say like a certainty that Barnes gets in, 1557 01:43:01,160 --> 01:43:06,360 Speaker 1: but he is very, very very strongly leaning towards getting 1558 01:43:06,360 --> 01:43:11,160 Speaker 1: in this race, regardless of what Josh Cole does. The 1559 01:43:11,439 --> 01:43:15,519 Speaker 1: declared candidate and Lieutenant Governor Sarah Rodriguez second place at 1560 01:43:15,600 --> 01:43:21,240 Speaker 1: eight percent. Thirty eight percent of Democrats remain undecided. Also 1561 01:43:21,600 --> 01:43:25,920 Speaker 1: included in the poll are David Crowley, who is right 1562 01:43:26,000 --> 01:43:30,920 Speaker 1: behind Sarah Rodriguez at seven percent, Josh Cole also seven percent, 1563 01:43:30,960 --> 01:43:35,479 Speaker 1: Francesco Hong at four along with Kelda Roy's Missy Hughes, 1564 01:43:35,920 --> 01:43:39,599 Speaker 1: who is the former head of WDC, and Ben Wickler, 1565 01:43:39,640 --> 01:43:44,600 Speaker 1: the former Democratic Party chairman who has been widely considered 1566 01:43:44,640 --> 01:43:47,200 Speaker 1: to be at least eyeing a run. He comes in 1567 01:43:47,640 --> 01:43:51,200 Speaker 1: at one percent. And as I said, and Governor Walker 1568 01:43:51,520 --> 01:43:56,240 Speaker 1: sort of agreed and reiterated, is what this shows, especially 1569 01:43:56,240 --> 01:44:01,040 Speaker 1: on the Republican side, is that polls this far out 1570 01:44:01,240 --> 01:44:05,439 Speaker 1: before there's any real money spent on name recognition. Are 1571 01:44:05,479 --> 01:44:08,639 Speaker 1: all about that recognition that already exists. This is why 1572 01:44:08,680 --> 01:44:12,880 Speaker 1: there are so many candidates who are already in this 1573 01:44:13,120 --> 01:44:15,920 Speaker 1: race that are excuse me that there are so many 1574 01:44:15,920 --> 01:44:19,360 Speaker 1: candidates who are not in this race, but who are 1575 01:44:19,960 --> 01:44:25,479 Speaker 1: named by respondents because they remember them from former races. 1576 01:44:25,800 --> 01:44:29,240 Speaker 1: Tim Michaels four years ago. Eric Hovedy ran a great 1577 01:44:29,320 --> 01:44:33,160 Speaker 1: campaign last year for Senator, and I still believe, more 1578 01:44:33,200 --> 01:44:37,400 Speaker 1: than any other candidate in America, he was robbed. We 1579 01:44:37,479 --> 01:44:41,559 Speaker 1: had that buffoon, fake candidate running or he believed himself 1580 01:44:41,560 --> 01:44:44,240 Speaker 1: to be a real candidate leaguer, but he was clearly 1581 01:44:44,280 --> 01:44:47,000 Speaker 1: recruited by Democrats to serve as a spoiler. And in fact, 1582 01:44:47,040 --> 01:44:49,640 Speaker 1: the total number of votes he got is almost the 1583 01:44:49,720 --> 01:44:53,720 Speaker 1: exact right down to the single vote, right down to 1584 01:44:53,720 --> 01:44:56,560 Speaker 1: the vote, The number of votes he got is identical 1585 01:44:56,600 --> 01:44:59,439 Speaker 1: to the margin between Hovedy and Tammy Baldwin. Meaning if 1586 01:44:59,439 --> 01:45:04,920 Speaker 1: he wasn't this race, I am convinced, utterly convinced that 1587 01:45:05,080 --> 01:45:07,760 Speaker 1: Eric Hovey wins, as well as the libertarian who is 1588 01:45:07,800 --> 01:45:10,800 Speaker 1: in the race, Anderson who had no business being there. 1589 01:45:10,840 --> 01:45:15,160 Speaker 1: But people remember Eric hoveany people remember Tim Michaels, And 1590 01:45:15,400 --> 01:45:19,000 Speaker 1: what the poll does show, unfortunately for Josh Showman, is 1591 01:45:19,040 --> 01:45:22,120 Speaker 1: that even though he's been going around the state, he's 1592 01:45:22,240 --> 01:45:24,680 Speaker 1: visited all seventy two counties. I'm very proud of that, 1593 01:45:25,000 --> 01:45:28,000 Speaker 1: he just does not have the name recognition because he 1594 01:45:28,120 --> 01:45:32,120 Speaker 1: hasn't put in the money in digital or in TV 1595 01:45:32,200 --> 01:45:36,160 Speaker 1: or radio advertising to get his message out there. And 1596 01:45:36,320 --> 01:45:39,320 Speaker 1: when you're going and I get this, the strategy is 1597 01:45:39,640 --> 01:45:42,240 Speaker 1: to build up grassroots support. And he's excellent. I was 1598 01:45:42,280 --> 01:45:44,840 Speaker 1: actually at an event with Josh a couple of months ago. 1599 01:45:44,840 --> 01:45:46,759 Speaker 1: I believe it was over the summer, maybe in the spring. 1600 01:45:47,680 --> 01:45:50,760 Speaker 1: He's fantastic. He talks the talk. He's a great guy. 1601 01:45:50,800 --> 01:45:53,760 Speaker 1: I like him a lot. But when that is your 1602 01:45:53,800 --> 01:45:58,360 Speaker 1: strategy is endearing yourself to the grassroots, you're not building 1603 01:45:58,439 --> 01:46:02,599 Speaker 1: up your name recognition talking to a very very very 1604 01:46:02,640 --> 01:46:06,400 Speaker 1: small sliver of the electorate, and you really have to 1605 01:46:06,439 --> 01:46:07,840 Speaker 1: have that money behind you. 1606 01:46:07,880 --> 01:46:08,040 Speaker 4: Now. 1607 01:46:08,040 --> 01:46:12,200 Speaker 1: It should be noted this poll five hundred respondents. It 1608 01:46:12,280 --> 01:46:16,520 Speaker 1: was conducted at almost the exact moment that Tiffany announced 1609 01:46:16,320 --> 01:46:20,080 Speaker 1: he did so on My show, which means there were 1610 01:46:20,120 --> 01:46:22,200 Speaker 1: a lot of people who are paying attention to that. 1611 01:46:22,479 --> 01:46:26,160 Speaker 1: Of course, it's big news that Tiffany gets in the race, 1612 01:46:26,840 --> 01:46:31,240 Speaker 1: and he obviously benefited from that. But when you've got 1613 01:46:31,320 --> 01:46:35,679 Speaker 1: thirty points, you've got thirty percent of the electorate saying 1614 01:46:35,960 --> 01:46:39,240 Speaker 1: we support this guy. The other named candidate is at 1615 01:46:39,280 --> 01:46:42,960 Speaker 1: four percent. I don't think you can spin that really 1616 01:46:43,479 --> 01:46:48,000 Speaker 1: as anything other than really really really good news for 1617 01:46:48,400 --> 01:46:51,280 Speaker 1: Tiffany and not great news for Josh Showman. It's on 1618 01:46:51,320 --> 01:46:55,439 Speaker 1: the other side, devastating news for Democrats because man deadbeat 1619 01:46:55,479 --> 01:47:00,920 Speaker 1: Barnes was pretty much the only Republican, only Democrat rather 1620 01:47:01,200 --> 01:47:05,439 Speaker 1: who didn't win statewide in twenty twenty two, and there's 1621 01:47:05,520 --> 01:47:10,040 Speaker 1: widespread belief that if he was not the candidate that 1622 01:47:10,080 --> 01:47:12,160 Speaker 1: they would have been able to pick off Ron Johnson. 1623 01:47:12,240 --> 01:47:15,240 Speaker 1: But because he was so terrible and because he was 1624 01:47:15,280 --> 01:47:18,280 Speaker 1: so radical, that that was the reason that Johnson was 1625 01:47:18,320 --> 01:47:21,240 Speaker 1: able to win. Now, this is the first open governor 1626 01:47:21,320 --> 01:47:24,479 Speaker 1: seat since Walker won in twenty ten, so first time 1627 01:47:24,520 --> 01:47:26,840 Speaker 1: this is a truly open race where there is not 1628 01:47:26,920 --> 01:47:31,559 Speaker 1: an incumbent. So who knows anything theoretically could happen, But 1629 01:47:32,479 --> 01:47:36,080 Speaker 1: I think at this point I would very much like 1630 01:47:36,160 --> 01:47:38,599 Speaker 1: to be Tom Tiffany if I am in this race. 1631 01:47:38,640 --> 01:47:41,200 Speaker 1: By the way, the generic ballot in this poll shows 1632 01:47:41,240 --> 01:47:44,800 Speaker 1: a three point edge for Republicans, but it is so 1633 01:47:45,080 --> 01:47:47,960 Speaker 1: early that you've got to take this with a massive 1634 01:47:48,120 --> 01:47:51,639 Speaker 1: and I mean massive reign of so we will be back. 1635 01:47:51,680 --> 01:47:55,400 Speaker 1: Brewers play tonight. Also the strange saga of the Mark 1636 01:47:55,680 --> 01:48:01,960 Speaker 1: Sanchez staff. That's next look to go up two games 1637 01:48:02,000 --> 01:48:05,479 Speaker 1: to nothing at home tonight. It's the late game eight 1638 01:48:05,560 --> 01:48:09,680 Speaker 1: oho eight pm, first pitch at American Family Field. They 1639 01:48:09,720 --> 01:48:14,800 Speaker 1: will send left hander Aaron Ashby as an opener in 1640 01:48:14,840 --> 01:48:19,519 Speaker 1: this game against Cubs starter Shota Emonaga. Brewers took Game 1641 01:48:19,600 --> 01:48:24,800 Speaker 1: one nine to three on Saturday. Gotta admit, top of 1642 01:48:24,840 --> 01:48:27,640 Speaker 1: the first I was a little concerned. They give up 1643 01:48:27,640 --> 01:48:29,880 Speaker 1: the leadoff home run, and then the bottom of the 1644 01:48:29,880 --> 01:48:33,559 Speaker 1: first it was no looking back nine to three the final. 1645 01:48:33,680 --> 01:48:39,080 Speaker 1: Never a doubt about that one. And this is great because, 1646 01:48:39,200 --> 01:48:44,679 Speaker 1: according to MLB dot Com, teams that win Game one 1647 01:48:44,720 --> 01:48:47,360 Speaker 1: of a best of five series go on to win 1648 01:48:47,479 --> 01:48:52,519 Speaker 1: the series seventy two point four percent of the time. 1649 01:48:52,960 --> 01:48:57,400 Speaker 1: The number is slightly better under the newer division series 1650 01:48:57,600 --> 01:49:00,760 Speaker 1: two to two one format, the team with home advantage 1651 01:49:00,880 --> 01:49:04,200 Speaker 1: gets two games, then two games to the other team, 1652 01:49:04,280 --> 01:49:07,280 Speaker 1: and then back home for a game five if necessary. 1653 01:49:07,680 --> 01:49:11,920 Speaker 1: The team winning Game one wins the series. Seventy three 1654 01:49:12,040 --> 01:49:17,320 Speaker 1: point nine percent of the time. That said, the Cubs 1655 01:49:17,600 --> 01:49:20,120 Speaker 1: are the best team in baseball, or at least they 1656 01:49:20,160 --> 01:49:24,040 Speaker 1: were during the regular season with a forty seven and 1657 01:49:24,240 --> 01:49:28,960 Speaker 1: twenty four record according to Fangrafts. In games where they 1658 01:49:28,960 --> 01:49:32,160 Speaker 1: were coming off a loss, Cubs did win the season 1659 01:49:32,280 --> 01:49:35,680 Speaker 1: series against the Brewers. Brewers win tonight, and it's not 1660 01:49:35,800 --> 01:49:38,080 Speaker 1: as though the series is over. But I'll bet you 1661 01:49:38,160 --> 01:49:40,360 Speaker 1: the team that goes up two to zero in a 1662 01:49:40,360 --> 01:49:43,040 Speaker 1: best of five series ends up winning the thing. It's 1663 01:49:43,080 --> 01:49:45,240 Speaker 1: got to be close to one hundred percent, ninety five 1664 01:49:45,360 --> 01:49:48,240 Speaker 1: ninety six percent. That, of course, is no guarantee of 1665 01:49:48,280 --> 01:49:51,559 Speaker 1: what's going to happen this time, but suffice it to say, 1666 01:49:51,600 --> 01:49:54,960 Speaker 1: the concern about the Brewers layoff of about a week 1667 01:49:55,280 --> 01:49:58,040 Speaker 1: between the final game of the regular season, we could 1668 01:49:58,080 --> 01:50:00,640 Speaker 1: go Sunday and then gain one of the pl layoffs 1669 01:50:00,720 --> 01:50:06,400 Speaker 1: on Saturday were overblown. That's always the thing you just 1670 01:50:06,479 --> 01:50:09,600 Speaker 1: have to be careful about. Now. The other thing is 1671 01:50:09,640 --> 01:50:13,000 Speaker 1: that sometimes a team just everything is clicking on a 1672 01:50:13,040 --> 01:50:15,960 Speaker 1: given day, and then the Brewers, if they were to 1673 01:50:16,080 --> 01:50:21,760 Speaker 1: lose tonight, the Cubs actually do get the slight advantage 1674 01:50:21,920 --> 01:50:24,599 Speaker 1: in this series because they go back home, and if 1675 01:50:24,640 --> 01:50:27,400 Speaker 1: they win back to back at Wrigley Field, they win 1676 01:50:27,439 --> 01:50:29,320 Speaker 1: the series. There is just not a whole lot of 1677 01:50:29,400 --> 01:50:32,400 Speaker 1: room for error in a best of five series. That said, 1678 01:50:32,640 --> 01:50:36,760 Speaker 1: the Brewers looked like an absolute force on Saturday, they 1679 01:50:36,800 --> 01:50:40,320 Speaker 1: look like the far better team. And here's open the 1680 01:50:40,360 --> 01:50:44,200 Speaker 1: Brewers all but put this one away late tonight. I 1681 01:50:44,240 --> 01:50:47,080 Speaker 1: know I will be staying up late to watch that one. 1682 01:50:47,160 --> 01:50:54,439 Speaker 1: Can we talk about Mark Sanchez's terrible, horrible, no good, 1683 01:50:54,880 --> 01:50:59,559 Speaker 1: very bad weekend in Indianapolis. Sanchez is a former NFL 1684 01:50:59,640 --> 01:51:04,360 Speaker 1: quarter back. He is a current analyst for Fox Sports. 1685 01:51:04,400 --> 01:51:09,559 Speaker 1: He was in Indianapolis to do Sunday's game and early 1686 01:51:09,760 --> 01:51:14,679 Speaker 1: Saturday morning he was stabbed and the news came out, 1687 01:51:14,840 --> 01:51:17,640 Speaker 1: and I was actually at my son's soccer game, and 1688 01:51:17,880 --> 01:51:19,960 Speaker 1: people were kind of like, what Mark Sanchez was stabbed? 1689 01:51:19,960 --> 01:51:22,679 Speaker 1: Oh my goodness, is this an incident of just out 1690 01:51:22,680 --> 01:51:26,960 Speaker 1: of control crime? Was he targeted? What was going on here? 1691 01:51:27,960 --> 01:51:32,680 Speaker 1: And then the full story came out. He was apparently 1692 01:51:32,920 --> 01:51:38,120 Speaker 1: attacking a sixty nine year old guy and now he's 1693 01:51:38,160 --> 01:51:44,599 Speaker 1: facing according to Marion County Indiana Prosecutor Ryan Meres. Further 1694 01:51:44,720 --> 01:51:50,639 Speaker 1: investigation by police led to a felony charge for his 1695 01:51:50,840 --> 01:51:55,280 Speaker 1: role in that fight. He was initially charged with three misdemeanors, 1696 01:51:55,280 --> 01:51:57,960 Speaker 1: but Mears earlier today said he now faces a charge 1697 01:51:57,960 --> 01:52:01,880 Speaker 1: of felony battery involving surious bodily injury that carries a 1698 01:52:01,880 --> 01:52:06,960 Speaker 1: maximum sentence of between one and six years of prison time. 1699 01:52:07,000 --> 01:52:11,080 Speaker 1: According to Mirrors, the decision between Sanchez and the sixty 1700 01:52:11,200 --> 01:52:16,320 Speaker 1: nine year old truck driver started over a parking space. This, 1701 01:52:16,400 --> 01:52:19,240 Speaker 1: according to mers today, you had the allegations of a 1702 01:52:19,240 --> 01:52:22,400 Speaker 1: thirty eight year old man becoming involved in an altercation 1703 01:52:22,479 --> 01:52:25,720 Speaker 1: with a sixty nine year old man who sustained significant, 1704 01:52:25,960 --> 01:52:29,560 Speaker 1: very severe injuries as a result of that altercation. We 1705 01:52:29,600 --> 01:52:32,759 Speaker 1: are literally talking about people fighting over a parking space 1706 01:52:33,160 --> 01:52:36,519 Speaker 1: and or a dispute where people are parking, and it 1707 01:52:36,560 --> 01:52:43,160 Speaker 1: resulted in someone just with incredibly significant injuries. According to 1708 01:52:43,360 --> 01:52:47,880 Speaker 1: an affid, David Sanchez was initially taken to a hospital 1709 01:52:47,880 --> 01:52:53,520 Speaker 1: in critical condition. Fox Sports reported Saturday afternoon that Sanchez 1710 01:52:53,640 --> 01:52:57,240 Speaker 1: was in stable condition. An updated affidavit was submitted by 1711 01:52:57,280 --> 01:53:01,720 Speaker 1: police that contained more details which squently led to that 1712 01:53:02,000 --> 01:53:08,000 Speaker 1: felony charge. An attorney for Sanchez has not been He 1713 01:53:08,040 --> 01:53:12,640 Speaker 1: has not returned a request for comment from CNN Now this. 1714 01:53:12,760 --> 01:53:18,400 Speaker 1: According to the new affidavit that was filed today, Sanchez 1715 01:53:18,520 --> 01:53:23,320 Speaker 1: was running in an alley near the Indianapolis Marriott downtown, 1716 01:53:23,360 --> 01:53:26,240 Speaker 1: where he was apparently staying. He approached the sixty nine 1717 01:53:26,280 --> 01:53:29,160 Speaker 1: year old man. The man works for a company that 1718 01:53:29,240 --> 01:53:32,880 Speaker 1: exchanges commercial frying oil, and he was parked in a 1719 01:53:32,880 --> 01:53:37,439 Speaker 1: loading dock area of a hotel. Detectives reviewed surveillance footage 1720 01:53:37,439 --> 01:53:41,200 Speaker 1: from the Indianapolis Marriott, which captured the incident, showed Sanchez 1721 01:53:41,240 --> 01:53:46,400 Speaker 1: approaching the man's truck and beginning a conversation. The man 1722 01:53:46,439 --> 01:53:49,920 Speaker 1: told detectives that Sanchez, who he didn't recognize, smelled of 1723 01:53:49,960 --> 01:53:53,760 Speaker 1: alcohol was slurring his speech, I could have just told you, 1724 01:53:54,360 --> 01:53:58,040 Speaker 1: knowing nothing else about this case other than the charges 1725 01:53:58,360 --> 01:54:02,160 Speaker 1: and sixty nine year old old man badly injured and 1726 01:54:02,240 --> 01:54:05,719 Speaker 1: the other guy stabbed, that alcohol was involved, Sanchez climbed 1727 01:54:05,800 --> 01:54:08,559 Speaker 1: up into the cab, according to this guy, despite the 1728 01:54:08,560 --> 01:54:12,439 Speaker 1: man insisting he shouldn't enter. According to the footage reviewed 1729 01:54:12,439 --> 01:54:15,839 Speaker 1: by detective, Sanchez grabbed the man threw him up against 1730 01:54:15,840 --> 01:54:19,600 Speaker 1: the wall. The man told detectives he then pepper sprayed Sanchez, 1731 01:54:19,800 --> 01:54:23,120 Speaker 1: and when Sanchez continued to advance toward him, the man 1732 01:54:23,439 --> 01:54:28,800 Speaker 1: pulled out a knife and struck Sanchez several times. The 1733 01:54:28,840 --> 01:54:31,679 Speaker 1: man was quoted as saying in this affidavit, this guy 1734 01:54:31,760 --> 01:54:34,560 Speaker 1: is trying to kill me. The man told police he 1735 01:54:34,600 --> 01:54:37,520 Speaker 1: took out his knife, stabbed Sanchez two or three times, 1736 01:54:37,880 --> 01:54:41,960 Speaker 1: then fell into the dumpster and some pellets that were 1737 01:54:42,000 --> 01:54:43,680 Speaker 1: on the ground. He said he felt he was in 1738 01:54:43,720 --> 01:54:46,000 Speaker 1: a life or death situation as Sanchez was on top 1739 01:54:46,040 --> 01:54:50,160 Speaker 1: of him before he eventually got to his feet. The 1740 01:54:50,200 --> 01:54:52,720 Speaker 1: affidavit states somehow the man made it to his feet 1741 01:54:52,760 --> 01:54:55,520 Speaker 1: and when mister Sanchez came at him, he stabbed mister 1742 01:54:55,600 --> 01:54:58,240 Speaker 1: Sanchez the last time. The next thing the man knew 1743 01:54:58,240 --> 01:55:00,360 Speaker 1: was mister Sanchez looked at him with a look of shock. 1744 01:55:00,400 --> 01:55:04,120 Speaker 1: He slowly turned around, and mister Sanchez took off northbound 1745 01:55:04,640 --> 01:55:07,320 Speaker 1: in the Ali. Sanchez later told a detective he could 1746 01:55:07,320 --> 01:55:10,160 Speaker 1: barely remember anything from the incident. He did not know 1747 01:55:10,200 --> 01:55:15,600 Speaker 1: who it involved or where it happened. Police were then 1748 01:55:15,720 --> 01:55:18,480 Speaker 1: called to a pub and eatery less than a mile 1749 01:55:18,520 --> 01:55:21,960 Speaker 1: from the Colts Stadium found Sanchez with several stab wounds 1750 01:55:22,280 --> 01:55:26,800 Speaker 1: to his upper torso. They also located a second man 1751 01:55:26,880 --> 01:55:32,840 Speaker 1: with a laceration to his left cheek. The surveillance video 1752 01:55:33,120 --> 01:55:38,000 Speaker 1: apparently tells the tale and this was a self defense 1753 01:55:38,200 --> 01:55:44,200 Speaker 1: stabbing and Sanchez is in some very very serious trouble. 1754 01:55:44,320 --> 01:55:46,920 Speaker 1: Just a bizarre story all the way around, and that 1755 01:55:47,000 --> 01:55:50,320 Speaker 1: will do it for today's edition of The Dan O'Donnell Show. 1756 01:55:50,800 --> 01:55:54,440 Speaker 1: We will be back tomorrow three ZHO six pm, as 1757 01:55:54,440 --> 01:55:56,880 Speaker 1: we are each and every weekday, balk to you then,